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Perceptions of arthritis glove wear of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and persistent hand pain: A nested questionnaire study within the A‐Gloves trial

Perceptions of arthritis glove wear of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and persistent hand pain: A nested questionnaire study within the A‐Gloves trial
Perceptions of arthritis glove wear of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and persistent hand pain: A nested questionnaire study within the A‐Gloves trial

Introduction: Arthritis gloves are prescribed in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to reduce hand pain, stiffness, and improve hand function. As part of a randomised controlled trial, this study investigated participants' perceptions of wearing arthritis gloves. Method: Participants with RA and persistent hand pain (n = 206) were randomly assigned and prescribed either loose-fitting gloves (control) or arthritis gloves (intervention), for day and/or night wear (as per individual need). At 12-weeks, the trial follow-up questionnaire also included items about whether the gloves prescribed were: beneficial or not; if yes, the benefits experienced; any problems encountered; if they stopped wearing gloves day and/or night, and why. Results: The questionnaire response rate was 154/206 (75%). In both groups, 73% reported gloves were beneficial (p = 0.97). There were no differences in types of benefits reported. The most common were: warmth (59% control: 54% intervention; p = 0.53); and comfort (54%: 62%; p = 0.29). Fewer reported problems with glove wear in the control group (33%), compared to the intervention group (49%); p = 0.05. In both groups, the most common daytime problem was inability to wear gloves for wet or dirty activities; and at night, gloves being too hot. Similar numbers in the control and intervention groups stopped wearing gloves either day or night (23%: 31%; p = 0.26), primarily for these reasons. Discussion: Participants' perceptions about wearing arthritis or loose-fitting gloves were very similar. Wearing ordinary gloves could result in similar perceived benefits to arthritis gloves.

arthritis, gloves, hand, hand function, hand pain, hand stiffness, orthoses
1478-2189
Hammond, Alison
3f265424-3b2b-4287-97a2-1019449c771b
Prior, Yeliz
b975bd46-8ff2-402a-a4a1-d7c894da8d63
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba
Firth, Jill
e418e95d-50fe-4e72-8d60-1fcb87f937b1
O’neill, Terence
153e17da-1c52-448a-b432-955806920210
Hough, Yvonne
7bc5de23-cd70-4984-8681-5690e54b3463
Hammond, Alison
3f265424-3b2b-4287-97a2-1019449c771b
Prior, Yeliz
b975bd46-8ff2-402a-a4a1-d7c894da8d63
Adams, Jo
6e38b8bb-9467-4585-86e4-14062b02bcba
Firth, Jill
e418e95d-50fe-4e72-8d60-1fcb87f937b1
O’neill, Terence
153e17da-1c52-448a-b432-955806920210
Hough, Yvonne
7bc5de23-cd70-4984-8681-5690e54b3463

Hammond, Alison, Prior, Yeliz, Adams, Jo, Firth, Jill, O’neill, Terence and Hough, Yvonne (2022) Perceptions of arthritis glove wear of patients with rheumatoid arthritis and persistent hand pain: A nested questionnaire study within the A‐Gloves trial. Musculoskeletal Care. (doi:10.1002/msc.1709).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: Arthritis gloves are prescribed in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to reduce hand pain, stiffness, and improve hand function. As part of a randomised controlled trial, this study investigated participants' perceptions of wearing arthritis gloves. Method: Participants with RA and persistent hand pain (n = 206) were randomly assigned and prescribed either loose-fitting gloves (control) or arthritis gloves (intervention), for day and/or night wear (as per individual need). At 12-weeks, the trial follow-up questionnaire also included items about whether the gloves prescribed were: beneficial or not; if yes, the benefits experienced; any problems encountered; if they stopped wearing gloves day and/or night, and why. Results: The questionnaire response rate was 154/206 (75%). In both groups, 73% reported gloves were beneficial (p = 0.97). There were no differences in types of benefits reported. The most common were: warmth (59% control: 54% intervention; p = 0.53); and comfort (54%: 62%; p = 0.29). Fewer reported problems with glove wear in the control group (33%), compared to the intervention group (49%); p = 0.05. In both groups, the most common daytime problem was inability to wear gloves for wet or dirty activities; and at night, gloves being too hot. Similar numbers in the control and intervention groups stopped wearing gloves either day or night (23%: 31%; p = 0.26), primarily for these reasons. Discussion: Participants' perceptions about wearing arthritis or loose-fitting gloves were very similar. Wearing ordinary gloves could result in similar perceived benefits to arthritis gloves.

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Perceptions of glove wear amongst people with rheumatoid arthritis R1 14.10.22 author accepted 20.10.22
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 October 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2022
Keywords: arthritis, gloves, hand, hand function, hand pain, hand stiffness, orthoses

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 473162
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/473162
ISSN: 1478-2189
PURE UUID: 1d007736-03d7-43d7-953f-ee64d0235853
ORCID for Jo Adams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1765-7060

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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2023 17:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:36

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Contributors

Author: Alison Hammond
Author: Yeliz Prior
Author: Jo Adams ORCID iD
Author: Jill Firth
Author: Terence O’neill
Author: Yvonne Hough

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