scholarly journals Validity and Reliability of Sickle Cell Self-efficacy Scale

2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 31-35
Author(s):  
Sheyda Javadipour ◽  
Shiva Javadipour ◽  
Bijan Keikhaeidehdezi ◽  
Meymanat Akbari

Correction: On 20/08/2014 the spelling of the third author was changed from Bijan Keykhah DehdeziTO Bijan Keikhaeidehdezi.Correction: On 20/08/2014 the affiliation of the first author was changed fromMusculoskeletal Rehabilitation Research Center, Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences of Ahvaz, IranTO Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation Research Center, Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences, Ahvaz, Iran Abstract:Background: psychometric properties of a 9-item self-appraisal scale for studying self-efficacy in sickle cell disease was evaluated in order to survey people’s comprehension of their capabilities to be engaged in functional activities of daily living who were suffering from sickle cell disease and in order to manage syndromes.Methods: the participants of this study were aged between 11-19 years with sickle cell disease under treatment for at least one year.Result: reliability analysis showed the internal consistency and correlation coefficient of the scale to be acceptable values. Construct validity analysis showed moderate positive correlation between the scores obtained using Sickle Cell Self-Efficacy Scale and those obtained using Mental Components Scale of SF36. There is a weak correlation between the score obtained from SCSES and that of Physical Components Scale of SF36.Conclusion: this scale can be used in the future for future studies on self-efficacy and also to find the relationship between this component and other components.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/ijls.v8i4.10931

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. 107602962110029
Author(s):  
Mira Merashli ◽  
Alessia Arcaro ◽  
Maria Graf ◽  
Matilde Caruso ◽  
Paul R. J. Ames ◽  
...  

The relationship between antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL) and sickle cell disease (SCD) has never been systematically addressed. Our aim was to evaluate potential links between SCD and aPL in all age groups. EMBASE/PubMed was screened from inception to May 2020 and Peto odds ratios for rare events were calculated. The pooled prevalence (PP) of IgG anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) was higher in individuals with SCD than in controls (27.9% vs 8.7%, P < 0.0001), that of IgM aCL was similar in the two groups (2.9% vs 2.7%); only individuals with SCD were positive for lupus anticoagulant (LA) (7.7% vs 0%, P < 0.0001). The PP of leg ulcers was similar between aPL positive and negative individuals (44% vs 53%) and between patients in acute crisis and stable patients (5.6% vs 7.3%). Reporting of aPL as a binary outcome and not as a titer precluded further interpretation. The results indicate that a prospective case-control study with serial measurements of a panel of aPL in SCD patients might be warranted, in order to understand further the possible pathogenic role of aPL in SCD.


2021 ◽  
pp. 105477382110467
Author(s):  
Huda Al Raqaishi ◽  
Mohammad Al Qadire ◽  
Omar Alzaabi ◽  
Omar Al Omari

Stigma contributes to the burden of individuals and families affected by Sickle cell disease (SCD) and causes delay in appropriate care seeking. The aim of this study is to examine the levels and associations between stigma, social support, self-efficacy, and self-care actions among adult patients with SCD in Oman using a cross-sectional, correlational design. Of the 264 participants, 56.1% ( n = 148) were males, with mean age of 30.1 years ( SD 7.7). Half of the participants were married, and 88.3% had no other associated diseases. The results demonstrate that patients in Oman suffer from health-related stigma. However, social support, self-efficacy, and self-care actions were reported to be high and correlated with several clinical and demographic variables. Based on the results, effective, low-cost interventions such as psycho-educational groups, individual counseling, or group therapies might be developed. They can promote belief in enhanced efficacy and improved SCD adaptation, thereby increasing patient, and provider satisfaction.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 3793-3793
Author(s):  
Andrew D. Campbell ◽  
Megumi Okumura ◽  
Ndidi Unaka ◽  
Sally Hutchinson ◽  
Onyinye Onyekwere

Abstract The relationship between hemoglobin dexoygenation and sickling is well known. However, the relationship between hypoxia and severity of disease in sickle cell patients has not been well established. Recently, nocturnal hypoxemia has been associated with higher incidence of CNS events including strokes, and elevated TCDs. We present our case series on 13 patients(12 SS, 1 SC) with sickle cell disease (SCD) who have nocturnal hypoxia. Approximately 75 patients were screened at the University of Michigan Sickle Cell clinic for nocturnal hypoxia either by symptoms of obstructive sleep apnea or by longitudinal baseline clinic 02 saturations (02 Sat &lt;92%). Of the 13 hypoxic pts, median baseline O2 Sat 90%(n=13, mean 90) and the median nocturnal O2sat (Nctnl 02 sat) 84%(n=13, mean 80%) with 10/13 with moderate-severe nocturnal hypoxia (O2sats&lt;85%)based on sleep studies. Multiple adverse events noted in the cohort were pulmonary hypertension (PHTN TRJV&gt;2.5, n=9, median 2.74/mean 2.74,) frequent pain episodes(&gt;3visits to ER or hospitalizations/year, n=7, with 5 pts &gt;5/year ), recurrent acute chest syndrome( ≥ 3 episodes, n= 10), CNS events (n=3 silent infarcts, vascular stenosis), priapism( (n=4, among 6 males ). Also reported were possible causes of the underlying hypoxia including obstructive sleep apnea(OSA)(n=7 of 11 pts), asthma(n= 10 of 13 pts), and chronic lung disease( n=8). In conclusion, the persistence of nocturnal hypoxia in pediatric sickle cell disease could possibly contribute to the development of severe complications of sickle cell disease. Treatment of underlying hypoxia (ie nighttime oxygen, maximize asthma treatment, T&A for OSA)may help prevent complications and lead to the improvement clinical symptoms. Further, chronic nocturnal hypoxia may complicate pulmonary disease and accelerated the development of PHTN. More studies are needed to clarify the mechanism of hypoxia in SCD. Table I. Clinical &Demographic Data of 13 SCD Patients with Nocturnal Hypoxia. Age:(6–22y/o, mean 15) Sex: M=6 F=7 Clinical: Total Mild Mod Sev. Genotype: SS=12, SC=1 Mean Range Nctnl Hypoxia(&lt;%) 13 3 5(&lt;85) 5(&lt;80) Baseline O2 Sat(%) 90 +3.0 86–97 Obstr Sleep Apnea 7 3 3 1 Nctnl 02 sat (%) 80+8.4 59–87 Pulm HTN 9 4 4 1 Total #Apneic Events(11) 65.6+80 6–256 Rest. Lung Ds. 8 2 5 1 Obstr. Apneic Events(7) 27+68.5 0–221 # of Episodes &lt;3 3–4 &gt;4 Hypopneic Events(9) 32.5+38 0–132 ACS 2 5 5 TRJet Velocity 2.74+.42 2–3.5 Severe Pain Crises/yr 1 2 5


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
M S Basati

A case of difficult diagnosis of a patient with sickle cell disease and tooth pain fuelled a literature review by a primary care general dental practitioner. A literature search was conducted to review the relationship between sickle cell disease and pulpal necrosis. The results indicated statistically significant associations of sickle cell disease and tooth pain without any carious or traumatic pathology. It is important for the primary care dentist to be aware of the relationship between sickle cell disease and pulpal necrosis to prevent misdiagnosis and consequently mistreatment. Background A female patient, 49, of African-Carribean descent with sickle cell disease presented to the dental clinic with chronic pain. The tooth involved was an upper right first premolar free of caries and trauma. On a periapical radiograph the surrounding alveolar bone had large areas of ‘black banding’. The patient reported that large ‘black bands’ had also been seen on radiographs of her hip and shoulder and eventually the orthopaedic physician had come to the diagnosis of bone necrosis secondary to the patient's sickle cell disease. With this information, a provisional diagnosis of pulpal necrosis secondary to avascular necrosis was made, once all other possible diagnoses had been excluded. The premolar was extirpated and at a review appointment there was complete resolution of symptoms. The author performed a literature review because as a primary care dentist he had never come across this diagnosis before and noted that other primary care practitioners might be interested to learn about it.


10.2196/16319 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. e16319
Author(s):  
Jane S Hankins ◽  
Nirmish Shah ◽  
Lisa DiMartino ◽  
Donald Brambilla ◽  
Maria E Fernandez ◽  
...  

Background Hydroxyurea prevents disease complications among patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). Although its efficacy has been endorsed by the National Health Lung and Blood Institute evidence-based guidelines, its adoption is low, both by patients with SCD and providers. Mobile health (mHealth) apps provide benefits in improving medication adherence and self-efficacy among patients with chronic diseases and have facilitated prescription among medical providers. However, mHealth has not been systematically tested as a tool to increase hydroxyurea adherence nor has the combination of mHealth been assessed at both patient and provider levels to increase hydroxyurea utilization. Objective This study aims to increase hydroxyurea utilization through a combined two-level mHealth intervention for both patients with SCD and their providers with the goals of increasing adherence to hydroxyurea among patients and improve hydroxyurea prescribing behavior among providers. Methods We will test the efficacy of 2 mHealth interventions to increase both patient and provider utilization and knowledge of hydroxyurea in 8 clinical sites of the NHLBI-funded Sickle Cell Disease Implementation Consortium (SCDIC). The patient mHealth intervention, InCharge Health, includes multiple components that address memory, motivation, and knowledge barriers to hydroxyurea use. The provider mHealth intervention, Hydroxyurea Toolbox (HU Toolbox), addresses the clinical knowledge barriers in prescribing and monitoring hydroxyurea. The primary hypothesis is that among adolescents and adults with SCD, adherence to hydroxyurea, as measured by the proportion of days covered (the ratio of the number of days the patient is covered by the medication to the number of days in the treatment period), will increase by at least 20% after 24 weeks of receiving the InCharge Health app, compared with their adherence at baseline. As secondary objectives, we will (1) examine the change in health-related quality of life, acute disease complications, perceived health literacy, and perceived self-efficacy in taking hydroxyurea among patients who use InCharge Health and (2) examine potential increases in the awareness of hydroxyurea benefits and risks, appropriate prescribing, and perceived self-efficacy to correctly administer hydroxyurea therapy among SCD providers between baseline and 9 months of using the HU Toolbox app. We will measure the reach, adoption, implementation, and maintenance of both the InCharge Health and the HU Toolbox apps using the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance framework and qualitatively evaluate the implementation of both mHealth interventions. Results The study is currently enrolling study participants. Recruitment is anticipated to be completed by mid-2021. Conclusions If this two-level intervention, that is, the combined use of InCharge Health and HU Toolbox apps, demonstrates efficacy in increasing adherence to hydroxyurea and prescribing behavior in patients with SCD and their providers, respectively, both apps will be offered to other institutions outside the SCDIC through a future large-scale implementation-effectiveness study. Trial Registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04080167; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04080167 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID) DERR1-10.2196/16319


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2167-2167 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miranda Bailey ◽  
Ajibola Abioye ◽  
George Morgan ◽  
Tom Burke ◽  
Tim Disher ◽  
...  

Background: Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) describes a group of inherited hemolytic disorders caused by structurally abnormal variants of hemoglobin, which result in the sickle-shaped red blood cells (RBCs) that are characteristic of the disease. In patients with SCD, overexpression of adhesion molecules such as P-selectin bind sickled RBCs to endothelial cells; this contributes to hemolytic anemia and vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs), which are associated with severe acute and chronic pain. Patients with sickle cell disease often experience disease-related complications, affecting a diverse range of organs, thought to be due to the systemic impact of chronically inflamed vasculature, ongoing hemolysis and ischemic damage as a result of vaso-occlusive events. Many of these SCD-related complications are associated with significant morbidity and poor quality of life. The relationship between VOC frequency and the incidence of these complications is still being assessed. This study aimed to assess the relationship between the number of VOC experienced in the previous year and the occurrence of complications using real world evidence from the UK, specifically the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) database. OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between the number of VOCs reported in the previous 12 months and the presence of SCD-related complications using a mixed modelling approach. METHODS: All patients reported with a diagnosis of SCD between 2008 and 2017 in the NHS England's HES database were identified. Detailed follow-up data on the number of vaso-occlusive crisis events and occurrence of complications was evaluated using ICD-10 diagnosis codes. Assuming no unmeasured confounding, the causal effect of VOCs, categorized into 3 groups (0, 1-2, 3+), was estimated using marginal structural models (MSM) for the complications reported in the dataset. To obtain inverse probability of treatment and censoring weights (IPTW and IPCW), the probability of being in each VOC category was estimated with a multinomial logistic model, and subsequently, the probability of being censored was estimated with a binary logistic model. The two models were adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity, and the occurrence in the previous 12 months of the 20 most common SCD complications and comorbidities in the dataset. Pooled logistic regressions were used to approximate the IPW-MSM Cox model. E-values were used to assess the minimum strength of association that an unmeasured confounder would have to have with both exposure (VOC) and outcome in order to fully explain away the observed relationship. Uncertainty in the magnitude of the E-value required to explain observed associations was explored by calculating values for both the point estimate and the lower bound of the confidence interval. RESULTS: A total of 15,076 patients were identified with a diagnosis of SCD in the HES database for this analysis. Patients had a median age of 30 and a female-male ratio of 1.7:1. A broad range of SCD related-complications were experienced by patients in the UK as shown in Table 1. Rates of some complications were observed less frequently than expected, in particular, leg ulcers, pulmonary hypertension, osteomyelitis, priapism and acute kidney injury, reported at <5% (Table 1). The hazard ratio associated with experiencing 3+VOCs versus 0 VOC in the previous year was calculated for all identified complications, resulting in a HR ≥5, for: priapism, osteomyelitis and acute chest syndrome; HR ≥2 to <5 for: gall stones, avascular necrosis, sepsis, cardiomegaly, pulmonary hypertension, CNS complications, leg ulcers, cellulitis, hyposplenism, liver complications and acute kidney injury. E-values (Table 1) suggest that most outcomes are robust to considerable unmeasured confounding, although large confidence intervals resulted in small lower-bound E-values for some outcomes (e.g. leg ulcers: 3.62 lower-bound: 1.00). Large E-values (>= 3 based on similar research in SCD) suggest results are robust to considerable unmeasured confounding, while small values imply greater fragility. CONCLUSIONS: This analysis shows that vaso-occlusive crises are related to the occurrence of important complications of sickle cell disease. Reducing the annual incidence of VOC may significantly lessen the ongoing organ damage and morbidity but may also improve the patient's quality of life with respect to these conditions. Disclosures Bailey: Novartis: Employment. Abioye:Novartis: Employment. Morgan:HCD Economics: Employment. Burke:HCD Economics: Employment. Disher:Cornerstone Research Group: Employment. Brown:Cornerstone Research Group: Employment. Bonner:Cornerstone Research Group: Employment. Herquelot:HEVA: Employment. Lamarsalle:HEVA: Employment. Raguideau:HEVA: Employment.


Blood ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 317-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
DV Devine ◽  
TR Kinney ◽  
PF Thomas ◽  
WF Rosse ◽  
CS Greenberg

Abstract Although abnormalities in coagulation tests have been reported during vaso-occlusive crises in patients with sickle cell disease, objective, readily performed laboratory tests that document the occurrence of this complication have not been available. We examined the relationship between fibrin D-dimer levels and the occurrence of complications in patients with sickle cell disease, using a commercially available latex bead agglutination assay. The patients were either asymptomatic, hospitalized for vaso-occlusive crisis, or had other complications of sickle cell disease including leg ulcers, chronic cholecystitis, aseptic necrosis, joint pain and infection. Fifty-seven percent of 187 samples on 96 patients had elevated levels of fibrin D-dimer. Ninety percent of 75 samples from asymptomatic patients were negative for fibrin D-dimer (less than 1 microgram/ml) but 97% of 29 samples from patients with vaso-occlusive crisis and 85% of 83 samples from patients with other complications of sickle cell disease were positive. In serial studies, worsening or amelioration in clinical complications were reflected in increasing or decreasing levels of fibrin D-dimer, respectively. The molecular species of fibrin identified by the latex agglutination test was shown to be fragment D-dimer by successive immunoprecipitation and protein blot analysis. We conclude that the complications of sickle cell disease, including vaso-occlusive crisis, result in the production of fibrin D-dimer, and its detection may be used as a marker for the presence of the complication.


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