2016
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/kew021
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Trends in paediatric rheumatology referral times and disease activity indices over a ten-year period among children and young people with Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis: results from the childhood arthritis prospective Study

Abstract: Objectives. The medical management of JIA has advanced significantly over the past 10 years. It is not known whether these changes have impacted on outcomes. The aim of this analysis was to identify and describe trends in referral times, treatment times and 1-year outcomes over a 10-year period among children with JIA enrolled in the Childhood Arthritis Prospective Study.Methods. The Childhood Arthritis Prospective Study is a prospective inception cohort of children with new-onset inflammatory arthritis. Analy… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…The median time to first PR visit at this Indian center was 4.1 months for the whole cohort and 3.3 months for group A. This is fairly comparable to the time described in high income countries: 3 [27] and 3.3 [28] months in France, 3 months in Germany [29], 3.8 months in Canada [30], 5.5 months in the UK [31] and 10 months in the United Arab Emirates [32]. In the EPOCA study the interval from onset to referral was 4.8 months in Africa and Middle East and 7.2 months in Southeast Asia [10].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The median time to first PR visit at this Indian center was 4.1 months for the whole cohort and 3.3 months for group A. This is fairly comparable to the time described in high income countries: 3 [27] and 3.3 [28] months in France, 3 months in Germany [29], 3.8 months in Canada [30], 5.5 months in the UK [31] and 10 months in the United Arab Emirates [32]. In the EPOCA study the interval from onset to referral was 4.8 months in Africa and Middle East and 7.2 months in Southeast Asia [10].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…In comparison, the European Union project Single Hub and Access point for PR in Europe (SHARE) survey which aimed to describe the current organization and delivery of specialist PR care across 29 European and allied countries estimated that nearly 70% of new patients were seen within 8 weeks of referral [39]. In a UK cohort, the median time between referral and assessment was 4 weeks [IQR 1.3, 8] and only 52.9% of the patients followed the BSPAR guideline and the JAM-Less recommendations of being assessed within 4 weeks of the referral letter [31] versus 100% in our center. This reduces significantly the total delay to the first PR visit.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the narratives specifically provide patient perspectives, these included their accounts and interpretations of how GPs responded to reported symptoms in similar ways. The narratives provide interesting illustrations of candidacy as a product of the interplay between patient, GP and the wider health system . Just as individuals may be inclined to seek age‐plausible explanations first, according to these accounts, so too did many GPs.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(12) These instruments are increasingly used as primary and secondary outcome measures in JIA clinical trials and have had a signi cant impact on our understanding of clinical outcomes; for example, recent observational studies consistently suggest that complete disease control (or inactive disease) is not routinely achieved in the clinical setting (13); in fact, routine clinical outcomes in JIA lag considerably behind those from clinical trials employing intensive or targeted early treatment regimes. (6,(14)(15)(16) Many of these modern disease activity instruments include patient/parent-reported variables; for example, the JIA Core Outcome Variables include a self-reported functional assessment (the Childhood Arthritis Assessment Questionnaire (CHAQ) and a 0-10cm visual analogue scale (VAS) for self-reporting of global well-being. (17) These assessment tools were designed by research teams to assess areas of concern highlighted by clinicians.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%