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2 raisons identifiées
Praticien-chercheur
8 articles scientifiques publiés — formation continue solide
Délais de RDV courts dans la région
126.7 rhumatos / 100 000 hab. — département bien doté
✨ Génération du profil synthétique IA en cours…
Articles déposés en accès libre sur l'archive ouverte des universités françaises (HAL) — gage d'activité de recherche en France.
Données ANS publiques (Licence Ouverte 2.0) · Enrichissements MonRhumato 100 % opt-in · Toute personne référencée peut demander la suppression ou la rectification.
Source : HAL — archive ouverte CCSD/CNRS (couvre articles, chapitres EMC, communications congrès, thèses).
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Secteur de conventionnement non disponible (médecin hospitalier ou non présent dans l'Annuaire santé CNAM des libéraux conventionnés).
Lien Doctolib = recherche Google site:doctolib.fr (le 1er résultat est presque toujours le profil correct s'il existe).
The Journal of rheumatology · 2018
Objective.Nonadherence is currently an underrecognized and potentially modifiable obstacle to care in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). The purpose of our study was to design and implement a standardized approach to identifying adherence barriers for youth with JIA across 7 pediatric rheumatology clinics through the Pediatric Rheumatology Care and Outcomes Improvement Network (PR-COIN) and to assess the frequency of adherence barriers in patients and their caregivers across treatment modalities.Methods.An iterative process using coproduction among parents and providers of patients with JIA was used to design the Barriers Assessment Tool to screen for adherence barriers across 4 treatment modalities (i.e., oral medications, injectable medications, infusions, and physical/occupational therapy). This tool was implemented in 7 rheumatology clinics across the United States and patient responses were collected for analysis.Results.Data were collected from 578 parents and 99 patients (n = 44 parent-child dyads). Seventy-seven percent (n = 444) of caregivers and 70% (n = 69) of patients reported at least 1 adherence barrier across all treatment components. The most commonly reported adherence barriers included worry about future consequences of therapy, pain, forgetting, side effects, and embarrassment related to the therapy. There was no significant difference between endorsement of barriers between parents and adolescents.Conclusion.Implementing a standardized tool assessing adherence barriers in the JIA population across multiple clinical settings is feasible. Systematic screening sheds light on the factors that make adherence difficult in JIA and identifies targets for future adherence interventions in clinical practice.
Lupus · 2019
Objectives The aims of this study are (1) to characterize factors influencing self-management behaviors and quality of life in adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients with childhood-onset systemic lupus erythematosus (cSLE) and (2) to identify barriers and facilitators of treatment adherence via focus groups. Methods AYAs with cSLE ages 12–24 years and primary caregivers of the adolescents participated in this study. Recruitment occurred during pediatric rheumatology clinic visits at a Midwestern children's hospital or the hospital's cSLE active clinic registry. Information about disease severity was obtained from patient health records. Pain and fatigue questionnaires were administered. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze data. Results Thirty-one AYA patients and caregivers participated in six focus groups. Ten major themes emerged from sessions; four were expressed both by the AYA and caregiver groups: knowledge deficits about cSLE, symptoms limiting daily function, specifically mood and cognition/learning, barriers and facilitators of adherence, and worry about the future. Themes unique to AYA participants included symptoms limiting daily functioning—pain/fatigue, self-care and management, impact on personal relationships, and health care provider communication/relationship. For caregiver groups unique themes included need for school advocacy, disruption of family schedule, and sense of normalcy for their adolescent. Conclusion AYAs with cSLE face a lifelong disease characterized by pervasive pain, fatigue, organ damage, isolation—social and/or physical—and psycho-socioeducational challenges. This study confirmed that continued psychosocial support, health information education, adherence interventions, and personalized treatment plans are necessary to increase self-management and autonomy in AYAs with cSLE.
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2018
Source PubMed · Recherche par auteur (homonymes possibles, vérifier l'affiliation).
Clinical rheumatology · 2025 · Journal Article
Harris JG, Holland MJ, Fox E, Favier L, et al.
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2018 · Journal Article
Favier LA, Ting TV, Modi AC
The Journal of rheumatology · 2018 · Journal Article
Favier LA, Taylor J, Loiselle Rich K, Jones KB, et al.
Pediatric rheumatology online journal · 2024 · Journal Article
Harris JG, Favier L, Jones JT, Ibarra M, et al.
Pediatric quality & safety · 2024 · Journal Article
Harris JG, Jones JT, Favier L, Fox E, et al.
The Journal of rheumatology · 2021 · Journal Article
Aljaberi N, Ghulam E, Smitherman EA, Favier L, et al.
BMJ open quality · 2017 · Journal Article
Jean MR, Weaver A, Mastin-Diebold T, Kissinger K, et al.
Lupus · 2019 · Journal Article
Harry O, Crosby LE, Smith AW, Favier L, et al.
Pediatric quality & safety · 2024 · Journal Article
Harris JG, Jones JT, Favier L, Fox E, et al.