Su Samuel, Marrie Ruth Ann, Bernstein Charles N
Department of Internal Medicine, Max Rady College of Medicine, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
J Can Assoc Gastroenterol. 2021 Jul 21;5(2):59-67. doi: 10.1093/jcag/gwab022. eCollection 2022 Apr.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) including Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) imposes a significant burden on health-related quality of life, particularly in social domains. We sought to investigate the factors that limit social participation in patients with IBD.
We assessed a cohort of 239 Manitobans with IBD. We collected sociodemographic information, medical comorbidities, disease phenotype, symptom activity and psychiatric comorbidity (using the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV). Participants completed the eight-item Ability to Participate in Social Roles and Activities (APSRA) questionnaire, which assesses participation restriction, including problems experienced in social interaction, employment, transportation, community, social and civic life.
Poorer social participation scores were associated with earning less than $50,000 CAD income annually ( < 0.001), actively smoking ( = 0.006), higher symptom scores ( < 0.001 for CD, = 0.004 for UC), and having an increasing number of chronic medical conditions ( = -0.30). History of depression ( < 0.001) and anxiety ( = 0.001) and having active depression ( < 0.001) and anxiety ( = 0.001) all predicted poor social participation scores. IBD phenotype or disease duration was not predictive. Based on multivariable linear regression analysis, significant predictors of variability in social participation were medical comorbidity, psychiatric comorbidity, psychiatric symptoms and IBD-related symptoms.
The factors that predict social participation by IBD patients include income, smoking, medical comorbidities, IBD symptom burden, and psychiatric comorbidities. Multivariable linear regression suggests that the most relevant factors are medical comorbidity, psychiatric comorbidity, psychiatric symptoms and IBD symptoms.
炎症性肠病(IBD)包括克罗恩病(CD)和溃疡性结肠炎(UC),对健康相关生活质量造成了重大负担,尤其是在社会领域。我们试图研究限制IBD患者社会参与的因素。
我们评估了一组239名患有IBD的马尼托巴人。我们收集了社会人口统计学信息、医疗合并症、疾病表型、症状活动情况以及精神疾病合并症(使用《精神疾病诊断与统计手册第四版》的结构化临床访谈)。参与者完成了八项社会角色和活动参与能力(APSRA)问卷,该问卷评估参与限制,包括在社交互动、就业、交通、社区、社会和公民生活中遇到的问题。
社会参与得分较低与以下因素相关:年收入低于50,000加元(<0.001)、积极吸烟(=0.006)、较高的症状得分(CD为<0.001,UC为=0.004)以及慢性疾病数量增加(=-0.30)。抑郁症病史(<0.001)、焦虑症病史(=0.001)以及患有活动性抑郁症(<0.001)和焦虑症(=0.001)均预示着社会参与得分较低。IBD表型或疾病持续时间无预测作用。基于多变量线性回归分析,社会参与度变化的显著预测因素为医疗合并症、精神疾病合并症、精神症状和IBD相关症状。
预测IBD患者社会参与的因素包括收入、吸烟、医疗合并症、IBD症状负担和精神疾病合并症。多变量线性回归表明,最相关的因素是医疗合并症、精神疾病合并症、精神症状和IBD症状。