» Articles » PMID: 30091490

"Thrust out of Normality"-How Adults Living with Cystic Fibrosis Experience Pulmonary Exacerbations: A Qualitative Study

Overview
Journal J Clin Nurs
Specialty Nursing
Date 2018 Aug 10
PMID 30091490
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Aim And Objectives: To explore the experience of pulmonary exacerbation from the perspective of adults with cystic fibrosis.

Background: While management of pulmonary exacerbations is a pillar of cystic fibrosis care, little is known of patients' perspectives. Understanding the patient's experience is essential for developing and evaluating interventions in support of patient self-management.

Design: Qualitative study with longitudinal study in a subsample.

Methods: The study took place from 2015-2016 in a university hospital. Eighteen patients with cystic fibrosis were included who were ≥18 years of age and had no solid organ transplant. Patients' experiences were explored through semistructured interviews and analysed using framework analysis. They each participated in one interview, with a subsample (N = 7) being interviewed twice during and once after antibiotic therapy.

Results: Patients (11 men and 7 women; median age 29.5 years, range 19-55 years; median FEV 45%, range FEV 23%-105%) experienced pulmonary exacerbations as disruptions of their normality, which led to a substantial increase in their emotional distress. Exacerbations represented a period of threat and domination by CF; that is, symptoms and treatment consumed energy, restricted physical activity and daily life roles. "Noting change," "waiting until antibiotics help," "returning to normality" and "establishing a new normality" characterised their descriptions of the pulmonary exacerbation trajectory. Emotional distress was the major driver for patients' self-management, and personal goals and illness beliefs influenced also patients' self-management decisions.

Conclusion: The experienced degree and source of emotional distress are drivers for self-management decisions in patients with cystic fibrosis who experience a pulmonary exacerbation.

Relevance To Clinical Practice: Our data provide new understanding that will be essential to informing clinical practice, future patient-reported outcomes measures and intervention development.

Citing Articles

Patients' lived experiences of breathlessness prior to prehospital care - A phenomenological study.

Kauppi W, Axelsson C, Herlitz J, Jimenez-Herrera M, Palmer L Nurs Open. 2022; 9(4):2179-2189.

PMID: 35606842 PMC: 9190685. DOI: 10.1002/nop2.1247.


Exploring Associations Between Self-Compassion, Self-Criticism, Mental Health, and Quality of Life in Adults with Cystic Fibrosis: Informing Future Interventions.

Kauser S, Keyte R, Regan A, Nash E, Fitch G, Mantzios M J Clin Psychol Med Settings. 2021; 29(2):332-343.

PMID: 34750694 PMC: 9184429. DOI: 10.1007/s10880-021-09831-y.


BreathEase: rationale, design and recruitment of a randomised trial and embedded mixed-methods study of a multiprofessional breathlessness service in early palliative care.

Schunk M, Berger U, Le L, Rehfuess E, Schwarzkopf L, Streitwieser S ERJ Open Res. 2021; 7(4).

PMID: 34671668 PMC: 8521025. DOI: 10.1183/23120541.00228-2020.


Correspondence between lung function and symptom measures from the Cystic Fibrosis Respiratory Symptom Diary-Chronic Respiratory Infection Symptom Score (CFRSD-CRISS).

Gold L, Patrick D, Hansen R, Goss C, Kessler L J Cyst Fibros. 2019; 18(6):886-893.

PMID: 31126901 PMC: 6868291. DOI: 10.1016/j.jcf.2019.05.009.