Making the right thing the easy thing to do: strategies to improve outcomes in gout

2019 
Summary The burden of gout is increasing worldwide. Although urate-lower ing drugs have been available for more than half a century, the initiation and persistence of urate-lowering therapy remain low. Health-care system, practitioner, and patient barriers contribute to the clinical inertia in gout management. Pervasive beliefs about gout as a disease of an indulgent lifestyle that should be managed primarily with dietary modification are key barriers that prevent patients from receiving effective therapy. In light of safety concerns about newer urate-lowering medications, allopurinol, an inexpensive generic medication, is likely to remain the first-line urate-lowering therapy for the foreseeable future. Ensuring that allopurinol is optimally and persistently prescribed is a priority for improved gout management. A health literacy approach that focuses on patient understanding of gout as a chronic disease that requires behaviour change to take long term urate-lowering therapy is important. This approach provides a clear rationale for long-term urate-lowering therapy that is able to dissolve the monosodium urate crystals and ultimately prevent the symptoms of gout. Patient-centred models that use the skills of nurses and pharmacists to facilitate patient understanding can lead to major improvements in gout care. Additionally, systematic quality improvement approaches within practices, while reducing inconvenience and cost to patients, should be a priority.
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