| Literature DB >> 17651490 |
Oliver R Herber1, Wilfried Schnepp, Monika A Rieger.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A systematic review was conducted to analyse journal articles that describe or measure the impact of leg ulceration on patients' quality of life (QoL) in order to improve the content of an educational programme that aims to enhance self-care agency in leg ulcer patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17651490 PMCID: PMC1947954 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-5-44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Summary of quantitative studies: study design, sample, duration of current ulcer, aetiology, and instruments (n = 13)
| Chase et al. (2000); USA [17] | Descriptive study | 21 patients (8♀/13♂) compared with general US population | Mean age: 72 Range: 39–73 | Chronic venous leg ulcers (no indication on how ulcer aetiology was determined) | Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36), 10-item venous leg ulcer knowledge test (multiple choice) |
| Cullum & Roe (1995); UK [7] | Survey; Interviewer-administered semi-structured interview | 88 patients (58♀/30♂) and 60 healthy elderly controls (36♀/24♂) | Mean age: 80 Range: 65–98 Mean age (normal population): 77 Range (normal population): 65–91 | No information | Nottingham Health Profile (NHP); Life Satisfaction Index; Hospital Anxiety & Depression Scale; Short-form McGill pain questionnaire; Health Locus of Control Scale |
| Flett et al. (1994); New Zealand [15] | Survey + comparing two groups; Interviewer-administered questionnaire for leg ulcer patients; Self-administered questionnaire for controls | 14 patients (10♀/4♂) and 14 controls (8♀/6♂) | No information | Ulcers not classified according to type, size, or chronicity | 6-item disability scale (activity and mobility); 5-point scale (for frequency); Medical Problems Scale (diagnostic medical problems); 9-item measure (psychosomatic symptoms); 3 single item measures (health, pain, worry/concern) |
| Franks & Moffatt (1998); UK [14] | Cross-sectional study (survey); Interviewer-administered questionnaire | 758 patients (486♀/272♂) compared with mean age/sex-matched normal population values | Mean age: 74.6 Mean age (normal population): no information | No information | Nottingham Health Profile (NHP) |
| Gonçalves et al. (2004) Brazil [19] | Cross-sectional study; Interviewer-administered questionnaires | 90 patients (49♀/41♂) | Mean age: 61.4 (all patients) Mean age: 60.5 (venous leg ulcer patients) | Venous:(n = 73) 82% Arterial: (n = 1) 1% Mixed: (n = 3) 3% Others: (n = 13) 14% | 0–10 numeric pain intensity rating scale; Short-form McGill Pain questionnaire |
| Hareendran et al. (2005); UK [24] | Questionnaires + individual semi-structured interviews | 38 patients (26♀/12♂) | Mean age: 71.4 Range: 46–91 | Proven venous leg ulcers (Duplex ultrasound scan) | (modified) Skindex questionnaire |
| Hamer et al. (1994); UK [6] | Survey; Interviewer-administered semi-structured interviews | 88 patients and 70 healthy elderly controls | Age: 65+ Mean age (normal population): no information | No information | Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), Life Satisfaction Index, Hospital Anxiety & Depression Scale, Short-form McGill pain questionnaire, Health Locus of Control Scale |
| Hofman et al. (1997); UK/Sweden [10] | Longitudinal study; Semi-structured questionnaire | 140 patients (87♀/53♂) | Mean age: 64.7 Range: 22–92 | Venous:(n = 94) 67% Arterial: (n = 4) 3% Mixed: (n = 9) 6% Others: (n = 33) 24% (using ABPI) | 6-point verbal rating scale for Pain (McGill pain questionnaire) |
| Hyland et al. (1994); UK [20] | Testing of disease-specific self-report questionnaire | 50 patients (36♀/13♂ 1 gender unknown) | Mean age: 77 Range: 45–90; | Different aetiologies of leg ulcer | 34-item self-report questionnaire on Quality of Life |
| Klyscz et al. (1998); Germany [18] | Longitudinal study; Self-administered questionnaire | 142 patients (93♀/49♂) | Mean age: 51 Range: 16–76 | CVI I: (n = 51) 37.5% CVI II: (n = 44) 32.4% CVI III: (n = 41) 30.1% | Tübinger Questionnaire for measuring Quality of Life in patients with CVI (TLQ-CVI) |
| Lindholm et al. (1993); Sweden [12] | Survey; Postal questionnaire | 125 patients (74♀/51♂) compared to normal population | Mean age: 77 Range(♂): 36–91 Range (♂): 37–93 Mean age (normal population): no information | Venous, arterial and mixed aetiology ulcers | Nottingham Health Profile (NHP) only part 1 (pain, physical mobility, sleep, energy, emotional reactions, social isolation) |
| Phillips et al. (1994); USA [5] | Survey; Standardised personal interviews | 62 patients (37♀/25♂) | Mean age: 62 Range: 33–90 | Leg ulcers of varying aetiology, size and depth | Standardised personal interviews covering 4 domains (physical, functional, financial, psychological) |
| Price & Harding (1996); UK [13] | Survey; Comparing chronic leg ulcer patients with healthy controls | 55 patients (37♀/18♂) | Mean age: 70.4 | Chronic leg wounds of any kind with a minimum duration of 3 months; Exclusion criteria: diabetes, neurological/cardiac disorder, active vasculitis | Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) |
Summary of qualitative studies: sample, data collection, and reported patient problems grouped according to domains (n = 13)
| Bland (1996); New Zealand [25] | 9 patients (4♀/5♂); Phenomenological approach | Chronic open leg ulcers (aetiology not specified); Current duration: 8 months – 6 years | Pain Leakage Smell Foot odour | Difficulties maintaining personal hygiene | Difficulties to dry bandages; Difficulties to incorporate recommendations into everyday life; Receiving conflicting information; Unable to comply with treatment regime; Needing larger size shoes because of bulk bandages | Bandages draw other people's attention to the leg, bandages are seen as unsightly, frustration about having to rest for weeks; Concern about job security; Feelings of guilt when unable to comply with treatment regime; Invasion of privacy through nurses, Concordance diminished on long-term basis | |
| Brown (2005a, b) UK [29, 31] | 8 patients; Semi-structured, in-depth interviews using an interview guide; Phenomenological approach | Various leg ulcers | Poor mobility | Social disconnected-ness | Bandages restricted mobility; No understanding of the disease; Symptom relief is more important than complete healing; Close relationship with nurses; | Anxiety over falling; Feelings of loneliness; Feelings of depression | |
| Charles (1995); UK [8] | 4 patients (1♀/3♂); Semi-standard interviews with open-ended questions; Phenomenological approach | Chronic venous leg ulcer; Duration: 5 – 35 years | Pain Impaired mobility | Health professionals do not: (1) listen to patients concerns, (2) explain treatment regimes, (3) establish empathy | Hopelessness; Helplessness; Loneliness; Loss of self-worth; Social isolation; Reduced self-esteem | ||
| Chase et al. (1997); USA [23] | 37 patients; participant observation, field notes, pain logs; 7 patients interviewed using open-ended questions; Phenomenological approach | Pain Pruritus Smell Swelling Impaired mobility | Loss of job; Treatment-imposed limitations on activity | Life accommodation | A never-ending healing process; Open ulcer as a reminder of threat to tissue integrity; Body image changes; Limited social contact; Fear of amputation; Powerlessness; Difficulties in wearing shoes & clothes; Loss of freedom | ||
| Douglas (2001); UK [11] | 8 patients (6♀/2♂); Formal, unstructured interviews; Grounded theory | Venous leg ulcer; Duration: > 1 year | Pain Leakage Smell Impaired mobility Sleeplessness | Perceived conflicting advice by professionals; Seeking alternative treatment options; No understanding of the disease Little knowledge of or control over treatment; Poor adherence to treatment; Relationship with professionals | Expectation; Acceptance; Disappointment; Low self-esteem, Altered body image; Loss of self-control; Effect on relationships | ||
| Ebbeskog & Ekman (2001); Sweden [26] | 15 patients (12♀/3♂); Age range: 74–89; Personal interviews in form of a dialogue; Phenomenological-hermeneutic approach | Active venous leg ulcer (verified using ABPI > 0.8); Duration: 4 months – 2.5 years | Pain Leakage Impaired mobility Sleep disturbance Loss of energy | Difficulties maintaining personal hygiene; | Visiting friends had to wait until healing; Avoidance of visiting public bathing-places; Reduced social contacts; | Uncomfortable dressings; Difficulties in finding suitable shoes that fitted the bandaged foot | Altered body image; The wound is a constant reminder of the disease; Feelings of having no control over the body; Powerlessness; Feeling of being trapped; Feelings of depression; Difficulties imagining a life without leg ulcer; Fear of recurrence; Feeling that pain killers are bad for the body; Feeling that something bad might happen to the ulcer; Hopeful towards healing; |
| Hareendran et al. (2005); UK [24] | 38 (26♀/12♂); 6 focus groups using an interview guide with open-ended questions; Individual patient interviews for questionnaire development | Venous leg ulcer; Duration: 4 months – 45 years | Pain Discharge Pruritus Sleeplessness | Difficulty bathing; | Limitation of daily living, holiday, and hobbies; Problems with family function | Disappointment with treatment; | Ulcer affected self-confidence and appearance; Increased dependency |
| Hopkins (2004) UK [28] | 5 patients (1♀/4♂); Unstructured interview supplemented by a diary; Interpretative phenomenological analysis | Venous ulceration; Non-healing ulcers of > 1 years | Social exclusion; wasted days; private becomes public; | Good relationship with nurses; | Coping strategies: acceptance, comparison, thinking differently, hope | ||
| Hyde et al. (1999); Australia [16] | 12 patients (12♀); In-depth semi-structured and follow-up interviews; Gender-specific collection method | Leg ulcer; Duration: > 3 years | Pain Leakage Smell Sleeplessness | Pain as an indication for infection; Concern about analgesic therapy; Embarrassment; Loss of femininity; Maintaining control over integrity of legs; Wearing non-preferred appeal; Loneliness Coping strategies: determination, stoicism, resilience, hope; | |||
| Hyland et al. (1994); UK [20] | 22 patients; 6 focus groups Data analysis: no information | Different leg ulcer aetiologies | Pain Restrictions of activities | Receiving conflicting information; Cost of bandages | Feelings of regret, depression, loss of will power; Feelings of helplessness; Feeling unclean; Loss of femininity, Preoccupied by the ulcer, Uncertainty of healing; Patients engage in coping strategies | ||
| Klyscz et al. (1996); Germany [21] | 55 patients; Unstructured interviews; Content analysis | Various stages of chronic venous insufficiency ; CVI I: (n = 18) CVI II: (n = 22) CVI III: (n = 25) | Pain Heavy legs Leg complaints Impaired mobility | Quitted leisure time activities; | Time consuming consultations; Compression bandaging hampered mobility, | Cosmetic problems (e.g. do not wear skirts or elegant shores); Coping strategies: cycling, swimming,, walking, cold shower, leg elevation, | |
| Krasner (1998a, b); USA [22, 27] | 14 patients (7♀/7♂); Semi-structured interviews; Hermeneutic phenomenological approach | Active venous leg ulcer & ulcer pain at initial interview; Current duration: 2 months – 7 years | Pain Swelling | Interference with the job | Patients are labelled non-compliant; Patients have difficulty in operationalising professional advice | Carrying on despite the pain; Feelings of depression | |
| Walshe (1995); UK [9] | 13 patients (12♀/1♂); Informal unstructured interviews; Phenomenological approach | Venous leg ulcer; Duration: 4 months – 10 years | Pain Leakage Smell Impaired mobility Sleep disturbance | Difficulties in maintaining personal hygiene | Housebound | Questioned efficacy of dressings; Perceived inconsistency of treatment; Little understanding of leg ulceration; Control of treatment given to professionals | Alteration in self-image; Pessimistic view of healing; 4 coping strategies: comparison, feeling healthy, altered expectation, being positive; Uncertainty & worry Difficulties in getting shoes & clothes |