Predictors of the likelihood that patients with rheumatoid arthritis will communicate information about rheumatoid arthritis risk to relatives: a quantitative assessment

Imogen Wells, Dawit Zemedikun, Gwenda Simons, Rebecca Stack, Christian D. Mallen, Karim Raza, M Falahee*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

First-degree relatives (FDRs) of people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) are increasingly recruited to prediction and prevention studies. Access to FDRs is usually via their proband with RA. Quantitative data on predictors of family risk communication are lacking.
RA patients completed a questionnaire assessing likelihood of communicating RA risk information to their FDRs, demographic variables, disease impact, illness perceptions, autonomy preferences, interest in FDRs taking a predictive test for RA, dispositional openness, family functioning, and attitudes towards predictive testing. Ordinal regression examined associations between patients’ characteristics and their median likelihood of communicating RA risk to FDRs.
Questionnaires were completed by 482 patients. The majority (75.1%) were likely/extremely likely to communicate RA risk information to FDRs, especially their children. Decision-making preferences, interest in FDRs taking a predictive test, and beliefs that risk knowledge would increase people’s empowerment over their health increased patients’ odds of being likely to communicate RA risk information to FDRs. Beliefs that risk information would cause stress to their relatives decreased odds that patients would be likely to communicate RA risk.
These findings will inform the development of resources to support family communication about RA risk.
Original languageEnglish
Article number107713
Number of pages9
JournalPatient Education and Counseling
Volume112
Early online date24 Mar 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Family communication
  • First degree relatives
  • Patients
  • RA
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Risk communication
  • Survey

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