On World Arthritis Day ‘Don’t Delay, Connect Today’ Campaign educates on the importance of early diagnosis of rheumatic diseases

In Europe 120 million people live with rheumatic or musculoskeletal diseases.1

The European League Against Rheumatism, EULAR, calls for people to come together on World Arthritis Day (12th October) to raise awareness of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs). EULAR’s Don’t Delay, Connect Today Campaign aims to improve early diagnosis and timely access to care to help benefit the lives of the 120 million people in Europe with RMDs.1

Rheumatic diseases are one of the main causes of physical disability, contributing to societal and economic costs including loss of productivity in the workplace.2 In the European Union alone, an extra one million people could be at work each day if early interventions were more widely accessible for people with RMDs.3 Rheumatic diseases not only affect the people suffering from them, but also their families who bear a significant burden in terms of emotional and social costs to ensure relatives receive the necessary care and treatment.4,5,6

“Today, on World Arthritis Day, we call for better awareness and early referral for people with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases,” comments EULAR President, Johannes W. Bijlsma, Professor of Rheumatology. “Early diagnosis, referral to a rheumatologist, and access to the latest and most effective treatment can lead to better results for these people, and that is the basis of our Don’t Delay, Connect Today Campaign.”

The EULAR Campaign Don’t Delay, Connect Today aims to raise awareness of the importance of early diagnosis in preventing further damage to those living with RMDs, and to encourage timely access to evidence-based treatment. On World Arthritis Day, a global awareness-raising initiative, the Don’t Delay, Connect Today campaign calls the RMD community to come together to improve understanding of life with RMDs. The Campaign encompasses all three pillars of EULAR: People with Arthritis and Rheumatism in Europe (PARE), Health Professionals in Rheumatology (HPR), and scientific societies.

The campaign highlights the fact that delayed diagnosis can affect a patient’s physical ability and severely impact their quality of life.7 Through increasing awareness the campaign aims to tackle the challenge that RMDs present by improving diagnosis and access to effective treatments. In serious cases, RMDs can result in significant disability, impacting not only quality of life but also life expectancy.7 Fatigue, a major factor causing difficulty at work, is present in 90% of people with rheumatic disease.2 There are more than 200 different RMDs, and these can start at any age in both children and adults.8

Early diagnosis and treatment in RMDs is important because it has been shown to help reduce pain and to slow and even prevent disease progression.9,10,11 Despite this RMDs often receive delayed or no diagnosis and improving awareness amongst healthcare professionals and the wider community is an important part of overcoming the challenge presented by RMDs.12

“General Practitioners receive quite a small amount of training for RMDs, let alone in those conditions in children, and I think it is really important for them to listen to young people and their parents, as they are dealing with the symptoms every day,” explains Simon Stones, a member of PARE. “If we get a diagnosis quickly, that child could have such a different life.”

On World Arthritis Day Professor Johannes Bijlsma encourages people to educate themselves about RMDs and the affect they have on society and people’s lives.


Source: European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR)
References
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3 van der Linden MPM, et al. Long-Term Impact of Delay in Assessment of Patients with
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11 Tosteson AN, et al. Early discontinuation of treatment for osteoporosis. The American Journal of Medicine. 2003;115(3):2090-216.
12 Woolf AD, and Gabriel S. Overcoming challenges in order to improve the management of rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases across the globe. Clinical Rheumatology. 2015;34(5):815-817.