Article

Adherence in young people living with juvenile arthritis: A systematic review

Details

Citation

Nelson C, Noel D, Caes L & Duncan C (2023) Adherence in young people living with juvenile arthritis: A systematic review. Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology.

Abstract
Objective: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is one of the leading causes of chronic pain in pediatric patients. Treatment regimens, which are critical to symptom management, can be burdensome, involving medication with potentially aversive side effects and exercise that can cause joint pain. Thus, it is important to examine the barriers and facilitators to adherence in JIA. While systematic reviews exist for rheumatic disease in adults, there has not yet been a synthesis of the literature examining adherence in JIA. Methods: PsychINFO, PubMed and MEDLINE databases were systematically searched to identify qualitative and quantitative empirical studies that investigate adherence for JIA. Keywords included: patient compliance OR adherence OR persistence; youth OR children OR juvenile OR pediatric OR teen OR child OR adolescent; and rheumatoid arthritis OR idiopathic arthritis OR arthritis. Articles were excluded from the review if they involved non-human or adult samples, were non-experimental (e.g., practice recommendations), were not peer-reviewed, or were not written in English. After abstract selection, 32 articles were included in the analyses. Results: Adherence to exercise regimens was consistently lower than adherence to medication. Researchers relied heavily on self-report of adherence, which suggests a need for additional research with more objective measures of adherence. Across studies, psychological treatment was not included, so adherence to this treatment component in JIA remains understudied. Conclusions: Results suggest that future research should target devising and evaluating interventions to improve adherence to exercise and perhaps psychological treatment. Implications for Impact: To facilitate adherence in JIA, behavioral health providers should focus on building a strong therapeutic alliance between provider and child, fostering positive coping skills in parents and children, and monitoring the parent-child relationship.

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming

Journal
Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology

StatusAccepted
FundersNational Institutes of Health
Date accepted by journal06/02/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34849
ISSN2169-4826
eISSN2169-4834

People (1)

Dr Line Caes

Dr Line Caes

Associate Professor, Psychology

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