OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences of adolescents who underwent organ transplantation. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a systematic review of qualitative studies that explored the experiences of adolescents who underwent organ transplantation. We searched 5 electronic databases (to week 3 of July 2008) and reference lists of relevant articles. RESULTS: Eighteen articles reporting the experiences of 313 adolescent organ transplant recipients were included. Five major themes were identified: (1) redefining identity (seeking normality, anxiety and disappointment, adopting a positive attitude, desiring independence); (2) family functioning (parental overprotection, sibling support); (3) social adjustment (support networks, peer rejection, maintaining schoolwork, participation in physical activities); (4) managing medical demands (assuming responsibility, dependence on caregivers, disruption to lifestyle, vigilant adherence, pain and discomfort); and (5) attitude toward the donor (obligation of gratitude, strengthened relationship, concerns about risks to donor). CONCLUSIONS: Although transplantation offers adolescents a better chance of survival and increased freedom and energy, it poses many challenges. A multifaceted response is needed to equip adolescent transplant recipients with skills and capacities to help them achieve a sense of normality, cope with fear of death and organ rejection, gain acceptance among their peers, build confidence in learning, and resolve relationship tensions with the living donor.
OBJECTIVE: To describe the experiences of adolescents who underwent organ transplantation. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a systematic review of qualitative studies that explored the experiences of adolescents who underwent organ transplantation. We searched 5 electronic databases (to week 3 of July 2008) and reference lists of relevant articles. RESULTS: Eighteen articles reporting the experiences of 313 adolescent organ transplant recipients were included. Five major themes were identified: (1) redefining identity (seeking normality, anxiety and disappointment, adopting a positive attitude, desiring independence); (2) family functioning (parental overprotection, sibling support); (3) social adjustment (support networks, peer rejection, maintaining schoolwork, participation in physical activities); (4) managing medical demands (assuming responsibility, dependence on caregivers, disruption to lifestyle, vigilant adherence, pain and discomfort); and (5) attitude toward the donor (obligation of gratitude, strengthened relationship, concerns about risks to donor). CONCLUSIONS: Although transplantation offers adolescents a better chance of survival and increased freedom and energy, it poses many challenges. A multifaceted response is needed to equip adolescent transplant recipients with skills and capacities to help them achieve a sense of normality, cope with fear of death and organ rejection, gain acceptance among their peers, build confidence in learning, and resolve relationship tensions with the living donor.
Authors: Mary Amanda Dew; Donna M Posluszny; Andrea F DiMartini; Larissa Myaskovsky; Jennifer L Steel; Annette J DeVito Dabbs Journal: Curr Transplant Rep Date: 2018-04-17
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Authors: Allison Tong; Kate Flemming; Elizabeth McInnes; Sandy Oliver; Jonathan Craig Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol Date: 2012-11-27 Impact factor: 4.615