| Literature DB >> 26637194 |
Cathy Sampson1, Ben Hope Gill2, Nicholas Kim Harrison3, Annmarie Nelson4, Anthony Byrne5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic, fibrotic interstitial lung disease of unknown origin. It has a median survival of three years but a wide range in survival rate which is difficult to predict at the time of diagnosis. Specialist guidance promotes a patient centred approach emphasising regular assessment, information giving and supportive care coordinated by a multidisciplinary team (MDT). However understanding of patient and carer experience across the disease trajectory is limited and detailed guidance for MDTs on communication, assessment, and triggers for supportive and palliative interventions is lacking. This study addresses uncertainties relating to care needs of patients and carers at different stages of the IPF disease trajectory.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26637194 PMCID: PMC4670492 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-015-0145-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Specific objectives of the CaNoPy study
| 1. Describe changes in individuals’ and carers’ perceived care needs at different stages of IPF in order to improve future service interventions |
| 2. Identify time points or triggers at which supportive and palliative care services might effectively be introduced |
| 3. Define what information individuals with IPF and their carers require over time |
| 4. Evaluate the experiences and roles of carers for people with IPF |
IPF disease stage samples for CaNoPy
| Disease extent | Limited | Extensive |
|---|---|---|
| Limited disease: forced vital capacity (FVC) greater than 50 % predicted and gas transfer (TLCO) greater than 40 % predicted | Extensive disease: FVC less than 50 % or TLCO less than 40 % predicted | |
| Disease behaviour | Stable | Progressive |
| Stable disease: a decline of less than 10 % in FVC or less than 15 % in TLCO in the previous 12 months | Progressive disease: a decline in either FVC greater than 10 % or TLCO greater than 15 % during the previous 12 months |
Participant demographics
| Patient category | Mean age | Age range | Gender | Lung transplant | Oxygen |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extensive Progressive | 69.5 | 56–77 | 2 F 1 M | 1 | 3 |
| Limited Progressive | 72.6 | 59–81 | 2 F 3 M | 1 | 0 |
| Extensive Stable | 71 | 69–82 | 2 F 4 M | 0 | 2 |
| Limited Stable | 75.1 | 66–87 | 3 F 6 M | 0 | 0 |
Interpretative phenomenological analysis framework
| • Initial reading | |
| Reading of first transcript line-by-line, with preliminary comments | |
| • Early analysis | |
| Comments grouped into themes | |
| • Higher level abstraction | |
| Relationships developed between themes leading to an organised master list and thematic account of the case | |
| • Subsequent transcripts | |
| New themes tested against the previous transcripts as non-recurring themes were tested against following transcripts. Relationships across cases noted to identify a set of superordinate themes for the group |
Fig. 1Implications for practice