Multiple Sclerosis Case Study

2155 Words5 Pages

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is “a chronic, degenerative, progressive disease of the central nervous system characterized by the occurrence of small patches of demyelination in the brain and spinal cord” (Smeltzer & Bare, 1996). Over 2 million people are diagnosed with MS and it is known that there is a link between geography and the diagnosis of this disease (Faguy, 2016). In personal interviews with the patient and his wife, discussions were held about the disease process for this patient; medications were reviewed, and the spiritual assessment was conducted. This paper will discuss the current genetic information, disease modifying drugs and spiritual belief of one patient with chronic Multiple Sclerosis. Patient Demographics The patient, …show more content…

End-points of therapy in the medications that modify a disease are: lack of disease control, unacceptable adverse effects, lack of patient compliance, or something better becomes available (Faguy, 2016). Medications that suppress humoral immunity boost helpfulness but in reality recurrent or subsequent infections, as in the case of SC, beleaguer the patient (Ali, Muraro, & Nicholas, 2013). Nurses face the daunting task of explaining these medications are extremely expensive (ranging over $10,000 per year in estimation) and work to provide exceptional patient education for compliance as well as discussing a new window for alternative or complementary treatments …show more content…

This is true. The patient and his family have benefitted from the human genome project by a simple change of medication modality over the years since 1990. This needs to continue. There is a startling realization in a review of this essay for the patient with this long chronic illness; the sustainment of faith is a piece of the care of the patient that lacks phenomenological research. There is very little faith-based qualitative or quantitative data to pull from regarding this disease. Nursing research must possess scientific, medication, and holistic study and development. Nurses practice their profession as caregivers with little synthesis of scientific and holistic. This needs to change for patients like SC who value faith above all

Open Document