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Maintenance Haemodialysis: Patients' Experiences of Their Life Situation

Overview
Journal J Clin Nurs
Specialty Nursing
Date 2005 Feb 15
PMID 15707439
Citations 20
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Abstract

Aim: The aim of this study was to examine how patients suffering from CKD on maintenance haemodialysis experience their life situation. The focus was on how treatment encroaches on time and space and how patients experience care. The rationale was that this knowledge is necessary to provide professional support that takes into consideration a person's whole life situation.

Background: The experiences of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) undergoing maintenance haemodialysis have been studied in many quantitative studies, which translate patients' subjective experiences into objectively quantifiable data. However, there are few qualitative studies examining the experiences of these patients' life situation and expressing their experiences within the context of a nursing and caregiver's perspective.

Method: Data were collected by interviews with 41 patients between the ages of 29 and 86 years who participated in the study. A content analysis was used to identify common themes that describe the patients' experiences of their life situation.

Results: Three main themes were identified: "not finding space for living", "feelings evoked in the care situation" and, "attempting to manage restricted life". The first theme "not finding space for living" consisted of two sub-themes: "struggling with time-consuming care" and "feeling that life is restricted". The second theme "feelings evoked in the care situation" consisted of two sub-themes: "sense of emotional distance" and "feeling vulnerable".

Conclusions: The patients in this study indirectly expressed an existential struggle, indicating that encroachment of time and space were important existential dimensions of CKD. The findings indicated that caregivers were not always aware of this inducing a sense of emotional distance and a sense of vulnerability in the patients.

Relevance To Clinical Practice: Caregivers in dialysis units have to consider haemodialysis patients' experience of a sense of emotional distance in their relationship to caregivers. Nurses and doctors need to create routines within nursing practice to overcome this.

Citing Articles

Lived experiences of people with chronic kidney disease on maintenance dialysis: a systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies.

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"Machine-Dependent": The Lived Experiences of Patients Receiving Hemodialysis in Pakistan.

Shouket H, Gringart E, Drake D, Steinwandel U Glob Qual Nurs Res. 2022; 9:23333936221128240.

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The effect of psychosocial interventions on depression, anxiety, and quality of life in hemodialysis patients: a systematic review and a meta-analysis.

Barello S, Anderson G, Acampora M, Bosio C, Guida E, Irace V Int Urol Nephrol. 2022; 55(4):897-912.

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Status of and Factors Influencing the Stigma of Chinese Young and Middle-Aged Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients: A Preliminary Study.

Zhang N, Lai F, Guo Y, Wang L Front Psychol. 2022; 13:873444.

PMID: 35645865 PMC: 9130852. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.873444.


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Fielding C, Bramley L, Stalker C, Brand S, Toft S, Buchanan H J Vasc Access. 2022; 24(5):1121-1133.

PMID: 35034481 PMC: 10631276. DOI: 10.1177/11297298211067630.