PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Real-world data about emotional stress, disability and need for social care in a German IBD patient cohort.

  • Alica Kubesch,
  • Patric Boulahrout,
  • Natalie Filmann,
  • Irina Blumenstein,
  • Johannes Hausmann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0227309
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. e0227309

Abstract

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To date, there is insufficient insight into inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)-associated stress, recognized disability, and contact with the social care system. We aimed to assess these parameters in IBD patients and a non-IBD control group, who were invited to participate in an online survey developed specifically for this study (www.soscisurvey.de) with the help of IBD patients. 505 IBD patients and 166 volunteers (i.e., control group) participated in the survey. IBD patients reported significantly increased levels of stress within the last six months and five years (p<0.0001) and were more likely to have a recognized disability (p<0.0001). A low academic status was the strongest indicator of a disability (p = 0.006). Only 153 IBD patients (30.3%) reported contact with the social care system, and a disability was the strongest indicator for this (p<0.0001). Our study provides data on stress and disability in a large unselected German IBD cohort. We showed that patients with IBD suffer more often from emotional stress and more often have a recognized disability. As only about 1/3 of the patients had come into contact with the social care system and the corresponding support, this patient group is undersupplied in this area.