Journal of Participatory Medicine (Nov 2023)

An Ethics Action Plan for Rare Disease Care: Participatory Action Research Approach

  • Ariane Quintal,
  • Isabelle Carreau,
  • Annie-Danielle Grenier,
  • Caroline Hébert,
  • Christine Yergeau,
  • Yves Berthiaume,
  • Eric Racine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/46607
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
p. e46607

Abstract

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BackgroundOwing to their low prevalence, rare diseases are poorly addressed in the scientific literature and clinical practice guidelines. Thus, health care workers are inadequately equipped to provide timely diagnoses, appropriate treatment, and support for these poorly understood conditions. These clinical tribulations are experienced as moral challenges by patients, jeopardizing their life trajectories, dreams, and aspirations. ObjectiveThis paper presents an ethical action plan for rare disease care and the process underlying its development. MethodsThis action plan was designed through an ethical inquiry conducted by the Ethics and Rare Diseases Working Group, which included 3 patient partners, 2 clinician researchers, and 1 representative from Québec’s rare disease association. ResultsThe plan is structured into 4 components. Component A presents the key moral challenges encountered by patients, which are the lack of knowledge on rare diseases among health care workers, the problematic attitudes that it sometimes elicits, and the distress and powerlessness experienced by patients. Component B emphasizes a vision for patient partnership in rare disease care characterized by open-mindedness, empathy, respect, and support of patient autonomy from health care workers. Component C outlines 2 courses of action prompted by this vision: raising awareness among health care workers and empowering patients to better navigate their care. Component D compares several interventions that could help integrate these 2 courses of action in rare disease care. ConclusionsOverall, this action plan represents a toolbox that provides a review of multiple possible interventions for policy makers, hospital managers, practitioners, researchers, and patient associations to critically reflect on key moral challenges experienced by patients with rare diseases and ways to mitigate them. This paper also prompts reflection on the values underlying rare disease care, patient experiences, and health care workers’ beliefs and behaviors. Health care workers and patients were the primary beneficiaries of this action plan.