Coyne Marty, Rinaldi Amy, Brigham Katherine, Hawthorne James, Katsaros Dimos, Perich Morgan, Carrara Nicholas, Pericaud Flore, Franzese Chris, Jones Graham
Matchstick, Boonton, NJ, USA.
University of Rhode Island School of Pharmacy, Kingston, RI, USA.
Patient Prefer Adherence. 2022 Sep 19;16:2593-2607. doi: 10.2147/PPA.S375037. eCollection 2022.
Self-injection of biologics is a mainstay of chronic disease treatment, yet the process of self-injection often causes persistent apprehension and anxiety, distinct from needle phobia. While literature alludes to the role that routines and rituals play in self-injection, there is no comprehensive study on the routines and rituals self-injectors employ, nor of the process by which they are discovered and ingrained.
We conducted a mixed-method, observational pilot ethnography study of 27 patients with plaque psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, or ankylosing spondylitis with and without prior biologic self-injection experience. Patients submitted self-made videos, photos, and projective exercises of an actual biologic self-injection and completed validated instruments to assess burden of treatment. Videos and photos containing routine and ritual elements were thematically categorized based on functional and emotional benefit, and analyzed for differences based on current biologic, dosing frequency, time on current biologic, and burden of treatment measures.
During patients' initial at-home injections, training gaps became apparent, leading to a process of experimentation aimed at reducing pain/anxiety, increasing confidence, and building a consistent injection process. Routines were present in 27/27 (100%) patients and anchored the time, place, and process for injection, and incorporated approved use steps for the injection device. Ritual elements served as emotional coping strategies for patients and were present in 21/27 (77.8%) of patients.
Our findings suggest that providing patients device training using adult learning principles, teaching routines and rituals concurrently, and providing at-home opportunities for practice with a device trainer may be useful strategies to reduce anxiety, avoid unnecessary experimentation, and improve adherence to injection therapy. While further studies are needed to generalize our findings, we posit that routine and ritual elements can be incorporated into existing patient-clinician interactions or novel digital interventions through mobile medical applications, smart training devices, and connected injection ecosystems.
生物制剂的自我注射是慢性病治疗的主要手段,但自我注射过程往往会引发持续的担忧和焦虑,这与针头恐惧症不同。虽然文献提及了日常习惯和仪式在自我注射中所起的作用,但尚无关于自我注射者采用的日常习惯和仪式,以及这些习惯和仪式是如何被发现并根深蒂固的全面研究。
我们对27例斑块状银屑病、银屑病关节炎或强直性脊柱炎患者进行了一项混合方法的观察性试点人种志研究,这些患者有或没有生物制剂自我注射经验。患者提交了实际生物制剂自我注射的自制视频、照片和投射练习,并完成了经过验证的工具以评估治疗负担。包含日常习惯和仪式元素的视频和照片根据功能和情感益处进行主题分类,并根据当前使用的生物制剂、给药频率、当前使用生物制剂的时间以及治疗负担测量指标分析差异。
在患者最初的家庭注射过程中,培训差距变得明显,导致了一个旨在减轻疼痛/焦虑、增强信心和建立一致注射过程的试验过程。27/27(100%)的患者存在日常习惯,这些习惯确定了注射的时间、地点和过程,并纳入了注射装置的批准使用步骤。仪式元素是患者的情感应对策略,21/27(77.8%)的患者存在此类元素。
我们的研究结果表明,运用成人学习原则为患者提供设备培训、同时教授日常习惯和仪式,并提供在家中使用设备训练器进行练习的机会,可能是减轻焦虑、避免不必要试验以及提高注射治疗依从性的有用策略。虽然需要进一步研究以推广我们的研究结果,但我们认为日常习惯和仪式元素可以通过移动医疗应用程序、智能训练设备和联网注射生态系统纳入现有的医患互动或新型数字干预措施中。