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本文引用的文献

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Constitution of Long COVID illness, patienthood and recovery: a critical synthesis of qualitative studies.长新冠疾病、病患和康复的构成:定性研究的批判性综合。
BMJ Open. 2024 Mar 28;14(3):e083340. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-083340.
2
Solving the puzzle of Long Covid.解决长新冠之谜。
Science. 2024 Feb 23;383(6685):830-832. doi: 10.1126/science.adl0867. Epub 2024 Feb 22.
3
Journey mapping long COVID: Agency and social support for long-hauling.长新冠之旅:长途跋涉的能动性和社会支持。
Soc Sci Med. 2024 Jan;340:116485. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116485. Epub 2023 Dec 3.
4
The Long or the Post of It? Temporality, Suffering, and Uncertainty in Narratives Following COVID-19.长与短?新冠疫情后叙事中的时间性、苦难与不确定性
J Med Humanit. 2025 Mar;46(1):3-20. doi: 10.1007/s10912-023-09824-y. Epub 2023 Nov 14.
5
Long-term health impacts of COVID-19 among 242,712 adults in England.英格兰 242712 名成年人的 COVID-19 长期健康影响。
Nat Commun. 2023 Oct 24;14(1):6588. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-41879-2.
6
Living with Long COVID: A Longitudinal Interview Study of Individuals' Communicative Resilience Through the "Long Haul".与长新冠共存:通过“长途跋涉”对个体沟通韧性的纵向访谈研究。
Health Commun. 2024 Sep;39(10):2135-2151. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2023.2257941. Epub 2023 Sep 21.
7
Outcomes after Critical Illness. Reply.危重症后的结局。回复。
N Engl J Med. 2023 Jul 27;389(4):382-383. doi: 10.1056/NEJMc2304264.
8
'I am just a shadow of who I used to be'-Exploring existential loss of identity among people living with chronic conditions of Long COVID.“我只是过去的影子”-探索长期新冠患者中存在的身份丧失。
Sociol Health Illn. 2024 Jan;46(1):59-77. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.13690. Epub 2023 Jun 30.
9
Battling the unknown: Using composite vignettes to portray lived experiences of COVID-19 and long-COVID.应对未知:使用组合特写描绘 COVID-19 和长新冠的生活体验。
PLoS One. 2023 Apr 26;18(4):e0284710. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0284710. eCollection 2023.
10
The Experiences of Post-ICU COVID-19 Survivors: An Existential Perspective using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis.ICU 后 COVID-19 幸存者的体验:使用解释现象学分析的存在主义视角。
Qual Health Res. 2023 Jun;33(7):589-600. doi: 10.1177/10497323231164556. Epub 2023 Apr 6.

重新思考“康复”:对英国新冠肺炎及新冠长期症状患者重症监护经历的比较性定性分析

Rethinking 'Recovery': A Comparative Qualitative Analysis of Experiences of Intensive Care With COVID and Long Covid in the United Kingdom.

作者信息

MacLean Alice, Driessen Annelieke, Hinton Lisa, Nettleton Sarah, Wild Cervantee, Anderson Eilidh, Brown Ashley, Hoddinott Pat, O'Dwyer Callum, Ziebland Sue, Hunt Kate

机构信息

Institute for Social Marketing and Health, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK.

Department of Health Services Research and Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.

出版信息

Health Expect. 2025 Apr;28(2):e70253. doi: 10.1111/hex.70253.

DOI:10.1111/hex.70253
PMID:40200747
原文链接:https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11979357/
Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Interpretations of 'recovery' from illness are complex and influenced by many factors, not least patient expectations and experiences. This paper examines meanings of 'recovery', and how it is strived towards, drawing on the example of COVID-19 infection.

METHODS

Drawing on qualitative interviews (n = 93) conducted in the UK between February 2021 and July 2022, we compare adults' accounts of being admitted to an Intensive Care Unit (ICU) with COVID-19 to accounts of being ill with Long COVID, defined as ongoing symptoms for at least 12 weeks postinfection. We conducted a multi-stage comparative analysis using Nvivo to organise and code the data.

RESULTS

We identified similarities and differences in participants' descriptions of their 'worlds of illness'. For both groups, perceptions of recovery were shaped by the novel, unknown nature of COVID-19. Participants questioned the achievability of full restoration of prior states of health, highlighted the heterogeneity of 'recovery trajectories' and described the hard physical and emotional work of adjusting to changed selves. Themes that revealed differences in 'worlds of illness' described included the different baselines, waymarkers, and pathways of illness experiences. Differences in other people's responses to their illness were also evident. For ICU participants, hospitalisation, and especially ICU admission, conferred legitimate patient status and authenticity to their symptoms. Family, friends and healthcare professionals acknowledged their illness, celebrated their survival, and granted them latitude to recover. For Long Covid participants, their patient status often lacked comparable authenticity in others' eyes. They reported encountering a lack of recognition and understanding of their ongoing need to recover.

CONCLUSIONS

This study highlights how the meanings of illness ascribed by others can influence how recovery is experienced. Our findings highlight the importance of ensuring people are made to feel their illness experiences are legitimate, regardless of hospitalisation status, formal diagnosis or lack of medical knowledge and pathways. They also indicate the value of emphasising the different permutations, and lack of linearity, that recovery can take. This may help to help to guard against a lack of understanding for experiences of recovery which do not meet idealised notions.

PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION

Both studies were guided by an advisory panel that included patient and public involvement representatives with lived experience of Intensive Care/COVID experience and Long COVID respectively. Through regular meetings with the research teams, the advisory panel had input into all aspects of the study conduct, including recruitment methods and content of the interview topic guide and feedback on preliminary analyses. The Long COVID study also included a lived experience coinvestigator who contributed to data interpretation and analysis.

摘要

引言

对疾病“康复”的解读很复杂,受到许多因素的影响,尤其是患者的期望和经历。本文以新冠病毒感染为例,探讨“康复”的含义以及人们如何努力实现康复。

方法

基于2021年2月至2022年7月在英国进行的定性访谈(n = 93),我们将感染新冠病毒后入住重症监护病房(ICU)的成年人的经历与患有长期新冠症状(定义为感染后至少持续12周的症状)的成年人的经历进行比较。我们使用Nvivo进行多阶段比较分析,以组织和编码数据。

结果

我们在参与者对其“患病世界”的描述中发现了异同。对于两组而言,对康复的认知都受到新冠病毒新颖、未知性质的影响。参与者质疑完全恢复到患病前健康状态的可行性,强调“康复轨迹”的异质性,并描述了适应改变后的自我所需要付出的艰苦身体和情感努力。揭示“患病世界”差异的主题包括疾病经历的不同基线、路标和途径。他人对其疾病反应的差异也很明显。对于入住ICU的参与者来说,住院,尤其是入住ICU,赋予了他们合法的患者身份,并使他们的症状具有可信度。家人、朋友和医护人员认可他们的疾病,庆祝他们的存活,并给予他们康复的空间。对于患有长期新冠症状的参与者来说,在他人眼中,他们的患者身份往往缺乏同等的可信度。他们报告说,自己持续康复的需求缺乏他人的认可和理解。

结论

本研究强调了他人赋予疾病的含义如何影响康复体验。我们的研究结果强调了确保人们感到自己的疾病经历是合理的重要性,无论其住院状态、正式诊断如何,也无论是否缺乏医学知识和就医途径。它们还表明了强调康复可能呈现的不同变化形式以及缺乏线性特征的价值。这可能有助于防止对不符合理想化概念的康复经历缺乏理解。

患者或公众贡献

两项研究均由一个咨询小组指导,该小组包括分别具有重症监护/新冠经历和长期新冠症状经历的患者和公众参与代表。通过与研究团队定期开会,咨询小组对研究开展的各个方面提供了意见,包括招募方法、访谈主题指南的内容以及对初步分析的反馈。长期新冠症状研究还包括一位有实际经历的共同研究者,他参与了数据解读和分析。