International Journal of Nursing Practice | 2019

Identification of symptom clusters and their synergistic effects on quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis patients

 
 
 

Abstract


AIMS\nTo examine the presence of symptom clusters and synergistic effects of symptom clusters on quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis patients.\n\n\nBACKGROUND\nRheumatoid arthritis patients frequently experience multiple concurrent symptoms of pain, fatigue, and depression.\n\n\nDESIGN\nA nonexperimental, cross-sectional correlation design.\n\n\nMETHODS\nThe study participants were 179 rheumatoid arthritis patients. Data were collected between August and December 2016. A hypothetical model was developed based on the Theory of Unpleasant Symptoms Model: physiological antecedents included disease activity and obesity; symptoms of pain, fatigue, and depression were hypothesized as being clustered, and quality of life was taken as the outcome variable.\n\n\nRESULTS\nDisease activity had significant direct effects on pain, fatigue, and depression and indirect effects on fatigue and depression, whereas obesity had a significant direct effect on fatigue alone. Three symptom clusters, namely, pain fatigue, fatigue depression, and pain-fatigue depression were identified and found to have significant synergistic effects on quality of life.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nOur findings support the importance of managing clusters of symptoms simultaneously, that is, collective symptom management. Inter-cluster dynamics between symptoms should be considered when nurses develop symptom management strategies or self-management programs to improve the quality of life of rheumatoid arthritis patients.

Volume 25
Pages &NA;
DOI 10.1111/ijn.12713
Language English
Journal International Journal of Nursing Practice

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