Sumpton Daniel, Thakkar Vivek, O'Neill Sean, Singh-Grewal Davinder, Craig Jonathan C, Tong Allison
University of Sydney, Sydney, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Westmead, Liverpool Hospital and Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research, Liverpool, New South Wales, Australia.
Liverpool Hospital and Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research, Liverpool, and Western Sydney University, Campbelltown, New South Wales, Australia.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2017 Nov;69(11):1733-1742. doi: 10.1002/acr.23207. Epub 2017 Oct 9.
Patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) experience severe physical limitations and psychological morbidity, but their lived experience remains underrepresented and is reflected in the scarcity of evidence-based patient-centered interventions. We aimed to describe patients' perspectives of SSc to inform strategies to improve their care.
Face-to-face semistructured interviews were conducted with 30 adult patients with limited cutaneous or diffuse cutaneous SSc in Australia. Transcripts were thematically analyzed using HyperRESEARCH software.
Six themes were identified: bodily malfunction (restrictive pain, debilitating physical changes, pervasive exhaustion), deprivation of social function (loss of work and career, social isolation, threat to traditional roles, loss of intimacy), disintegration of identity (stigmatizing physical changes, disassociated self-image, extinguished hopes, alone and powerless, invisibility of illness), insecurity of care (unrecognized disease, ambiguity around diagnosis and cause, information insufficiency, resigning to treatment limitations, seeking reassurance, fear of progression), avoiding the sick role (evading thoughts of sickness, protecting family, favorable comparison), and perseverance and hope (positive stoicism, optimism about treatment and monitoring, taking control of own health, pursuing alternative treatments, transcending illness through support).
SSc inflicts major bodily and social restrictions that crush patients' identity and self-image. Uncertainties about the cause, diagnosis, and prognosis can undermine confidence in care, leading to anxiety and therapeutic nihilism. Access to psychosocial care to support the patients' role and functioning capacity, as well as communication and education that explicitly address their concerns regarding management may potentially improve treatment satisfaction, self-efficacy, adherence, and outcomes in patients with SSc.
系统性硬化症(SSc)患者存在严重的身体功能受限和心理疾病,但他们的生活经历仍未得到充分体现,且基于证据的以患者为中心的干预措施也很匮乏。我们旨在描述SSc患者的观点,为改善其护理的策略提供依据。
对澳大利亚30名患有局限性皮肤型或弥漫性皮肤型SSc的成年患者进行了面对面的半结构式访谈。使用HyperRESEARCH软件对访谈记录进行了主题分析。
确定了六个主题:身体功能障碍(限制性疼痛、使人衰弱的身体变化、普遍的疲惫)、社会功能丧失(工作和职业丧失、社会孤立、对传统角色的威胁、亲密关系丧失)、身份认同瓦解(有辱人格的身体变化、自我形象脱节、希望破灭、孤独无助、疾病隐匿)、护理不安全感(疾病未被认识、诊断和病因不明确、信息不足、接受治疗限制、寻求安慰、对病情进展的恐惧)、避免患病角色(回避患病想法、保护家人、进行有利比较),以及毅力和希望(积极的坚忍、对治疗和监测的乐观态度、掌控自己的健康、寻求替代治疗、通过支持超越疾病)。
SSc造成了严重的身体和社会限制,摧毁了患者的身份认同和自我形象。病因、诊断和预后的不确定性会削弱对护理的信心,导致焦虑和治疗虚无主义。提供心理社会护理以支持患者的角色和功能能力,以及进行明确解决他们对治疗担忧的沟通和教育,可能会提高SSc患者的治疗满意度、自我效能感、依从性和治疗效果。