Our findings indicate areas where further healthcare tools could improve patient experiences of cancer treatment. This could include offering individualized information and tools to increase patient empowerment, as well as patient/caregiver collaboration (co-care).
Learning to live with illness: experiences of persons with recent diagnoses of diabetes mellitus. Background. The process of learning to live with an illness is complex. By better understanding the learning process for persons with diabetes in the early stage of the illness, the role of the health care can be shown. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Method.A qualitative descriptive design was used, and interviews were conducted.Thirteen informants with a recent diagnosis of diabetes were included and asked to narrate about their experience of living with diabetes. Qualitative inductive content analysis was used.Findings. Four themes emerged: 'taken over by a new reality', 'the body plays a role in life', 'different ways to learn' and 'the healthcare service as a necessary partner'. Conclusion.People with short-term experience of the illness gained knowledge through personal resources such as their own experience and self-reflection. The learning process includes an inner dialogue between the self, the body and the life. Informants were concerned with grasping a new reality and understanding a different self and body where lifestyle changes and uncertainty were present. When health care was accessible and sensitive to their needs, those with short-term experience of DM chose the staff as key players in the early stages of their life with diabetes.
Aim: This paper is a report of a study of illuminating the meaning of "learning to live with diabetes" three years after being diagnosed. This study showed that duration of illness was not of importance for the understanding of living with diabetes. Living with diabetes three years after being diagnosed meant to experience both an overall balance in one's existence and a daily struggle. SUMMARY STATEMENTWhat is already known about this topic *Living with a chronic illness such as diabetes means being challenged by changes, which raises a need to understand, a learning experience. *Diabetes distress, suffering and loss are well-recognised problems.*People living with diabetes are expected to be active and take responsibility for their illness, providing the majority of their own care. What this paper adds*How the person experiences the body, as an object or a subject, was crucial for how decisions were made. * The glucose meter, information, routines and others' experiences both facilitated and inhibited the learning process. * Duration of illness was not of importance for the understanding of living with diabetes. Living with diabetes three years after being diagnosed meant to experience both an overall balance in one's existence and a daily struggle.Implications for practice and/or policy *Health care staff should listen to how people talk about their body so as to increase the understanding of how they integrate diabetes into the lived body.*Health care staff should be aware that technical tools can be experienced as both facilitating and inhibiting the process of listening to one's body.* Patient education in a group setting, with the goal of sharing experiences in a learning process, will be meaningful only if the person has the ability to interact with others.
BackgroundLearning involves acquiring new knowledge and skills, and changing our ways of thinking, acting, and feeling. Learning in relation to living with diabetes is a lifelong process where there is limited knowledge of how it is experienced and established over time. It was considered important to explore how learning was developed over time for persons living with diabetes.AimThe aim of the study was to identify patterns in learning when living with diabetes, from recently being diagnosed, and over a 3-year period.Materials and methodsA longitudinal qualitative descriptive design was used. Thirteen participants, with both type I and type II diabetes, were interviewed at three different occasions during a 3-year period. Qualitative content analysis was used in different steps in order to distinguish patterns.FindingsFive main patterns of learning were identified. Two of the patterns (I and II) were characterized by gradually becoming comfortable living with diabetes, whereas for one pattern (IV) living with diabetes became gradually more difficult. For pattern V living with diabetes was making only a limited impact on life, whereas for Pattern III there was a constant management of obstacles related to illness. The different patterns in the present study showed common and different ways of learning and using different learning strategies at different timespans.ConclusionThe present study showed that duration of illness is not of importance for how far a person has come in his own learning process. A person-centered care is needed to meet the different and changing needs of persons living with diabetes in relation to learning to live with a lifelong illness.
The increasing prevalence of chronic conditions and multimorbidity poses great challenges to healthcare systems. As patients’ engagement in self-managing their chronic conditions becomes increasingly important, eHealth interventions are a promising resource for the provision of adequate and timely support. However, there is inconclusive evidence about how to design eHealth services to meet the complex needs of patients. This study applied an evidence-based and theory-informed user-centered design approach in three phases to identify the needs of older adults and healthcare professionals in the collaborative management of multimorbidity (phase 1), develop an eHealth service to address these needs (phase 2), and test the feasibility and acceptance of the eHealth service in a clinical setting (phase 3). Twenty-two user needs were identified and a web-based application—ePATH (electronic Patient Activation in Treatment at Home)—with separate user interfaces for patients and healthcare professionals was developed. The feasibility study with two nurses and five patients led to a redesign and highlighted the importance of adequately addressing not only varying user needs but also the complex nature of healthcare organizations when implementing new services and processes in chronic care management.
Background Qualitative longitudinal research (QLR) comprises qualitative studies, with repeated data collection, that focus on the temporality (e.g., time and change) of a phenomenon. The use of QLR is increasing in health research since many topics within health involve change (e.g., progressive illness, rehabilitation). A method study can provide an insightful understanding of the use, trends and variations within this approach. The aim of this study was to map how QLR articles within the existing health research literature are designed to capture aspects of time and/or change. Methods This method study used an adapted scoping review design. Articles were eligible if they were written in English, published between 2017 and 2019, and reported results from qualitative data collected at different time points/time waves with the same sample or in the same setting. Articles were identified using EBSCOhost. Two independent reviewers performed the screening, selection and charting. Results A total of 299 articles were included. There was great variation among the articles in the use of methodological traditions, type of data, length of data collection, and components of longitudinal data collection. However, the majority of articles represented large studies and were based on individual interview data. Approximately half of the articles self-identified as QLR studies or as following a QLR design, although slightly less than 20% of them included QLR method literature in their method sections. Conclusions QLR is often used in large complex studies. Some articles were thoroughly designed to capture time/change throughout the methodology, aim and data collection, while other articles included few elements of QLR. Longitudinal data collection includes several components, such as what entities are followed across time, the tempo of data collection, and to what extent the data collection is preplanned or adapted across time. Therefore, there are several practices and possibilities researchers should consider before starting a QLR project.
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