Benefits of a membership in a psoriasis patient Organisation: a quasi-experimental longitudinal study

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Benefits of a membership in a psoriasis patient Organisation: a quasi-experimental longitudinal study. / Langenbruch, Anna; Radtke, Marc A; Foos, Zinaida; Augustin, Matthias.

in: ARCH DERMATOL RES, Jahrgang 310, Nr. 10, 12.2018, S. 807-813.

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@article{a89b9ccc7e024b8a8f0ddf3f056e0156,
title = "Benefits of a membership in a psoriasis patient Organisation: a quasi-experimental longitudinal study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Patient organisations play an important role in supporting patients with chronic diseases and allow information transfer beyond professional care structures. Until now, only few studies have investigated the benefits of a dermatological patient organisation. In this study, potential benefits of joining the German Psoriasis Association (Deutscher Psoriasis Bund e. V., DPB) were surveyed.METHODS: The quasi-experimental longitudinal design included four groups of individuals suffering from psoriasis: those (1) with DPB membership of 5 years, (2) with voluntary new membership, (3) with randomly awarded membership, and (4) without membership. Participants were interviewed two times in 12 months, about quality of life, depression, participation in patient education classes, health status, and treatment benefits.RESULTS: 295 individuals participated (mean age 54 years; 50.3% females). At the outset of the study, participants with voluntary new membership rated their health status worse and showed higher depression scores than those with awarded membership. The proportion of participants who joined patient education classes only increased in the group of long-term members. Health status worsened in the group of non-members, and it improved in the group of those with awarded and voluntary new membership. Treatment benefit only increased in the voluntary new members group.CONCLUSIONS: DPB membership seems to be associated with some relief from psoriasis-related strains, particularly in the group of those who joined voluntarily. This could be due to the fact that individuals who become members out of their own volition are more likely to seek information and, therefore, benefit from their active engagement.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Anna Langenbruch and Radtke, {Marc A} and Zinaida Foos and Matthias Augustin",
year = "2018",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1007/s00403-018-1869-x",
language = "English",
volume = "310",
pages = "807--813",
journal = "ARCH DERMATOL RES",
issn = "0340-3696",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Benefits of a membership in a psoriasis patient Organisation: a quasi-experimental longitudinal study

AU - Langenbruch, Anna

AU - Radtke, Marc A

AU - Foos, Zinaida

AU - Augustin, Matthias

PY - 2018/12

Y1 - 2018/12

N2 - BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Patient organisations play an important role in supporting patients with chronic diseases and allow information transfer beyond professional care structures. Until now, only few studies have investigated the benefits of a dermatological patient organisation. In this study, potential benefits of joining the German Psoriasis Association (Deutscher Psoriasis Bund e. V., DPB) were surveyed.METHODS: The quasi-experimental longitudinal design included four groups of individuals suffering from psoriasis: those (1) with DPB membership of 5 years, (2) with voluntary new membership, (3) with randomly awarded membership, and (4) without membership. Participants were interviewed two times in 12 months, about quality of life, depression, participation in patient education classes, health status, and treatment benefits.RESULTS: 295 individuals participated (mean age 54 years; 50.3% females). At the outset of the study, participants with voluntary new membership rated their health status worse and showed higher depression scores than those with awarded membership. The proportion of participants who joined patient education classes only increased in the group of long-term members. Health status worsened in the group of non-members, and it improved in the group of those with awarded and voluntary new membership. Treatment benefit only increased in the voluntary new members group.CONCLUSIONS: DPB membership seems to be associated with some relief from psoriasis-related strains, particularly in the group of those who joined voluntarily. This could be due to the fact that individuals who become members out of their own volition are more likely to seek information and, therefore, benefit from their active engagement.

AB - BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Patient organisations play an important role in supporting patients with chronic diseases and allow information transfer beyond professional care structures. Until now, only few studies have investigated the benefits of a dermatological patient organisation. In this study, potential benefits of joining the German Psoriasis Association (Deutscher Psoriasis Bund e. V., DPB) were surveyed.METHODS: The quasi-experimental longitudinal design included four groups of individuals suffering from psoriasis: those (1) with DPB membership of 5 years, (2) with voluntary new membership, (3) with randomly awarded membership, and (4) without membership. Participants were interviewed two times in 12 months, about quality of life, depression, participation in patient education classes, health status, and treatment benefits.RESULTS: 295 individuals participated (mean age 54 years; 50.3% females). At the outset of the study, participants with voluntary new membership rated their health status worse and showed higher depression scores than those with awarded membership. The proportion of participants who joined patient education classes only increased in the group of long-term members. Health status worsened in the group of non-members, and it improved in the group of those with awarded and voluntary new membership. Treatment benefit only increased in the voluntary new members group.CONCLUSIONS: DPB membership seems to be associated with some relief from psoriasis-related strains, particularly in the group of those who joined voluntarily. This could be due to the fact that individuals who become members out of their own volition are more likely to seek information and, therefore, benefit from their active engagement.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1007/s00403-018-1869-x

DO - 10.1007/s00403-018-1869-x

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30350131

VL - 310

SP - 807

EP - 813

JO - ARCH DERMATOL RES

JF - ARCH DERMATOL RES

SN - 0340-3696

IS - 10

ER -