Knowledge, Attitude and Practice for Pruritus Management in Physicians and Patients with Diabetes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Methodology
2.3. Data Analysis/Evaluation
3. Results
3.1. Consulting Physician Practice Dynamics
3.2. Knowledge around Pruritus Associated with Diabetes
3.2.1. Correlation between Pruritus and Diabetes
3.2.2. Types of Pruritus
3.2.3. Decision on Treatment and Diagnostic Tests
3.2.4. Profile of Patients with Pruritus
3.3. Attitude toward Management of Pruritus
3.3.1. Opinion on Pruritus
3.3.2. Perceptions around Severity of Pruritus Associated with Diabetes
3.3.3. Patient Education and Counseling
3.4. Practice in Management of Pruritus
3.4.1. Proportion of Patients Recommended Treatment
3.4.2. Challenges Encountered with Current Management of Pruritus
3.4.3. Ways to Overcome the Current Challenges
3.4.4. Participation in Continuous Medical Education (CME’s) by Physicians
3.4.5. Patient Baseline Characteristics
3.5. Knowledge around Pruritus Associated with Diabetes
Patients’ Initial View toward Pruritus
3.6. Attitude toward Management of Pruritus
3.6.1. Patients’ Journey
3.6.2. Perception on Severity of Pruritus
3.7. Practice of Management of Pruritus
3.7.1. Current Treatment Options
3.7.2. Patient’s View on Patient Support Program
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Treatment initiation | |
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Severe pruritus | |
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Duration and dosage | |
Acute pruritus |
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Chronic pruritus |
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Domain | Theme | Participants | Responses |
---|---|---|---|
Knowledge | Diabetes and associated conditions | Consulting physician, Delhi | “I mean diabetes, has got lot of skin manifestations. It could be both infective as well as non-infective. And since diabetes is one of the very important areas of my practice, so I see lot of infective patients of diabetes which are primarily you know Candida infections, or it could be pyodermas. And then there are non-infectious cause like your very commonly cause is, diabetic dermopathy is the word that is given. And then something which is very special for diabetes, not commonly seen is necrobiosis and then you find rare conditions like granuloma annulare. And I think the most common condition which I did not highlight, or post is a patient coming with simple itching and no other manifestation. You may find that the patient has got very dry skin, which is called as xerosis. And I feel xerosis is the most common manifestations of diabetic as far as the skin involvement is concerned.” |
Pruritus relation with diabetes | Consulting physician, Mumbai | “Pruritus and diabetes, in diabetes the people are prone get infections, and in that case, they may have pruritus. But it is not hard and fast rule that each and every person who is having diabetes must have pruritus.” | |
Types of pruritus | Consulting physician, Bangalore | “Commonest is localized pruritus, either it could be in the toes or in the skin folds.” | |
Treatment Guidelines | Consulting physician, Delhi | “Whatever I have read in my books, I try to practice that. I am not aware of any recent guidelines really speaking.” | |
Attitude | Perception about severity | “I don’t think there is a direct relation, to prevent further complications we have to keep a track on the diabetes patient and see if they are developing any complication. Only regular monitoring and tracking can help in such patients.” | |
Practice | Treatments Prescribed | Consulting physician, Mumbai | “Chronic patients are normally about elderly, so I would start with prednisolone 30 mg, for the first 5 days and then start tapering it off quickly. So, that they do not have any other abnormality, like glycemic control going haywire, the blood pressure going haywire and they end up developing symptoms like muscle weakness, increased appetite so all those things.” |
Consulting physician, Bangalore | “If you have to treat them for chronic pruritus, we have to give them steroid. When steroid is given, blood glucose goes high & managing blood glucose gets difficult.” | ||
Satisfaction with current treatment | Consulting physician, Bangalore | “If you have to treat them for chronic especially, we have to give them steroid. When you give steroid, their blood glucose goes high, managing that in the presence of the steroids becomes difficult. Secondly, the long-term management that requires, say 2 weeks, 4 weeks and all that. The patients may not be willing to take. The discontinuation in treatment that happens.” |
Class of Medication | Medication |
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Oral Medications |
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Topical Applications (Emollient, Steroids, Moisturizers, Creams and lotions, Powders) |
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Kalra, S.; Mittal, A.; Rathod, R.M.; Pinto, C.; Rathod, R.; Mane, A. Knowledge, Attitude and Practice for Pruritus Management in Physicians and Patients with Diabetes. Clin. Pract. 2022, 12, 27-36. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010004
Kalra S, Mittal A, Rathod RM, Pinto C, Rathod R, Mane A. Knowledge, Attitude and Practice for Pruritus Management in Physicians and Patients with Diabetes. Clinics and Practice. 2022; 12(1):27-36. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010004
Chicago/Turabian StyleKalra, Sanjay, Asit Mittal, Roheet M. Rathod, Colette Pinto, Rahul Rathod, and Amey Mane. 2022. "Knowledge, Attitude and Practice for Pruritus Management in Physicians and Patients with Diabetes" Clinics and Practice 12, no. 1: 27-36. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010004
APA StyleKalra, S., Mittal, A., Rathod, R. M., Pinto, C., Rathod, R., & Mane, A. (2022). Knowledge, Attitude and Practice for Pruritus Management in Physicians and Patients with Diabetes. Clinics and Practice, 12(1), 27-36. https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12010004