Cronin Patricia, Begley Cecily
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Chronic Illn. 2013 Sep;9(3):233-47. doi: 10.1177/1742395312465627. Epub 2012 Nov 5.
Recent literature acknowledges the impact of this progressive and debilitating disease on psychological and social well-being, but the plight of those with chronic pancreatitis remains unknown and hidden. The aim of this study was to develop an understanding of what it means to live with chronic pancreatitis.
Qualitative study based on philosophical hermeneutics using multiple unstructured interviews.
Fourteen people with chronic pancreatitis and five relatives took part in 41 interviews in 2007-2008.
Tertiary clinic in Ireland.
The meaning of living with chronic pancreatitis for participants in this study is 'enduring disruption'. Enduring has a two-fold meaning; it symbolises the perpetual or permanent nature of disruption that occurs at physiological, social and psychological levels (i.e., 'suffering'). Enduring also means 'to tolerate' and encompasses how the participants and their families cope and manage the overall transition from well person to a person with chronic pancreatitis.
This study offers an alternative perspective to previous quality of life research and presents a challenge to the emphasis on management of the pathophysiological processes and treatment of chronic pancreatitis that is decontextualised from the person's everyday living. Healthcare professionals need to understand and support people with chronic pancreatitis.
近期文献承认了这种进行性衰弱疾病对心理和社会福祉的影响,但慢性胰腺炎患者的困境仍不为人知且隐匿。本研究的目的是深入了解慢性胰腺炎患者的生活意味着什么。
基于哲学诠释学的定性研究,采用多次非结构化访谈。
14名慢性胰腺炎患者和5名亲属在2007年至2008年期间参与了41次访谈。
爱尔兰的三级诊所。
对于本研究中的参与者而言,患有慢性胰腺炎的生活意义是“忍受干扰”。忍受有双重含义;它象征着在生理、社会和心理层面发生的干扰的持续性或永久性(即“痛苦”)。忍受也意味着“容忍”,涵盖了参与者及其家人如何应对和管理从健康人到慢性胰腺炎患者的整体转变。
本研究为先前的生活质量研究提供了另一种视角,并对强调脱离患者日常生活背景的慢性胰腺炎病理生理过程管理和治疗提出了挑战。医疗保健专业人员需要理解并支持慢性胰腺炎患者。