| Literature DB >> 27398103 |
Janette McDougall1, Patricia Baldwin1, Jan Evans1, Megan Nichols1, Cole Etherington2, Virginia Wright3.
Abstract
While optimizing quality of life (QOL) is a key goal of rehabilitation care, no previous study has reported on what 'QOL' means to youth with chronic health conditions. In addition, no qualitative studies have explored the relationship between QOL and self-determination (SD). Objectives of this qualitative study were to examine: what the terms 'quality of life' and 'self-determination' mean to youth with chronic conditions; the factors these youth think are linked with these concepts; the relationship they see between concepts, the types of future goals youth have and how they view the connection between their SD and these goals. A descriptive methodology was used. A purposive sample of 15 youth aged 15 to 20 years was obtained. Youth had cerebral palsy, a central nervous system disorder, or autism spectrum disorder. Semi-structured interviews were conducted first, followed by a focus group. Line-by-line coding of transcripts was completed, codes were collapsed into categories, and themes identified. Participants viewed QOL as an overarching personal evaluation of their life, and used terms such as satisfaction and happiness to describe the concept. Factors related to QOL included: 'relationships', 'supportive environments', 'doing things', 'personal growth and moving forward', and 'understanding of self/acceptance of disability'. Participants described SD in such terms as confidence and motivation. Contributors to SD were: 'personal strengths', 'interdependence', and 'functional independence'. SD was considered important to QOL. Youth goals were reflective of the goals of most adolescents. They identified the importance of having key goals that were of personal interest to them. This study adds consumer-based information to the debate over the meaning of QOL. Service providers and decision makers should be aware of the factors that youth feel impact their QOL and SD, the importance of SD to youth QOL, and of SD to future goals, and consider this information when tailoring therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic conditions; Qualitative research; Quality of life; Self-determination; Youth
Year: 2015 PMID: 27398103 PMCID: PMC4917566 DOI: 10.1007/s11482-014-9382-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Res Qual Life ISSN: 1871-2576
Review of qualitative studies examining QOL for children and youth with chronic conditions
| Study | Year | Condition/disability | Sample size | Age range | Concept explored | Themes/domains/factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ronan et al. | 1999 | Epilepsy | 29 | 6–10 | HRQOL | Experience of epilepsy, life fulfillment and time use, social issues, impact of epilepsy, attribution |
| McEwan et al. | 2004 | Epilepsy | 22 | 12–18 | QOL and psychosocialdevelopment | Peer acceptance, development of autonomy, school-related issues, epilepsy as part of me, future |
| Berntsson et al. | 2007 | Long-term illness or disability (e.g., postcerebral tumour, cystic fibrosis, heart disease) | 15 | 12–19 | Well-being | Feeling of acceptance/disability as a natural part of life, feeling of support, feeling of personal growth |
| Nicholas et al. | 2007 | Inflammatory bowel disease | 80 | 7–19 | HRQOL | Treatment and symptom concerns, vulnerability and lack of control, negative self-perception relative to peers, benefits of social support, personal resources in coping |
| Young et al. | 2007 | Cerebral palsy | 28 | 8–13 | HRQOL | Social relationships, home and school environment, self and body, recreational activities and resources, relationships with family members other than parents, inclusion and fairness, home life and neighborhood, pain and discomfort, environmental accommodation of needs |
| Davis et al. | 2008 | Cerebral palsy | 17 | 13–18 | QOL | Physical health and physical changes, functioning, pain and discomfort, communication, social well-being and acceptance, relationships and sexuality, participation, independence and transitioning, emotional wellbeing, and self-esteem, acceptance of disability, supportive physical environment and equipment, getting on well at school |
| Shikako-Thomas et al. | 2009 | Cerebral palsy | 12 | 12–16 | QOL | Intrinsic strengths (managing challenges, self-perceptions, self-advocacy, mastery, aspects of cerebral palsy (severity, aging with a disability), family, peers, school, community, perceptions of others, pursuing preferences in the face of obstacles |
| Vinson et al. | 2010 | Cerebral palsy | 41 | 6–12 | QOL | Family, friends, pets, hobbies, physical play, physical health/physical needs, school/education, religion, electronics, entertainment, travel |
| Parkinson et al. | 2011 | Cerebral palsy | 28 | 8–13 | HRQOL | Social relationships, home environment, school environment, self and body, recreational activities and resources |
| Foley et al. | 2012 | Disability (e.g., cerebral palsy, autism spectrum disorder, Down syndrome) | 20 | 8–16 | Well-being | Having things to do, good friends, home and family life, anxiety about school performance, managing life issues (coping with peers, striving toward goals, developing skills), feeling good about oneself |
| Panepinto et al. | 2012 | Sickle cell disease | 13 | 5–18 | HRQOL | Pain (severity, limiting activities, fear), fatigue (affects school, work, sleep) emotions, symptoms and treatment, social relationships, communication with peers, healthcare providers |
| Squitieri et al. | 2013 | Neonatal brachial plexus palsy | 18 | 10–17 | QOL | Social impact and peer acceptance, emotional adjustment and psychological coping, body image concerns, functional limitations, physical and occupational therapy, pain, family dynamics |
| Hill et al. | 2014 | Osteogenesis imperfecta | 10 | 6–17 | HRQOL | Keeping safe, reduced function, pain, fear, independence, isolation/being different |
| Skjerning et al. | 2014 | Celiac disease | 23 | 8–18 | HRQOL | Symptoms, diagnosis process, self-perception, social and emotional impact of disease, thoughts about future, coping with food, coping with social situations |
QOL quality of life, HRQOL health-related quality of life
Participant responses to QOL and SD interview questions
| QOL definition | Factors related to QOL | SD definition | Contributors to SD | Whether/How QOL/SD Connected |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| “How enriched and fulfilling your life is.” | Family, friends, recreational activities,talking to people | “You are able to be determined in everything you do… your drive to achieve.” | Interest, motivation | Yes - “You need to be determined and to reach your fulfillment.” |
| “How you enjoy life and get the best out of life.” | Sports teams, friends, family, school, and being independent | “Knowing you can do that and not letting other people say you can’t do that and not giving up and always trying your best.” | Guidance counselors, teachers, educational assistants | Yes - “You have more options.” |
| “Making sure that everyone has a good life.” | Parents, food on the table, anything can affect QOL | “To will yourself to get the things that you need to get done done.” | Self-reliance, getting things done, caring for yourself | Yes - “It sets you [up] for what you’re going to do in the future.” |
| “You live life to the fullest and you never give up.” | Support from friends at school, EA and resource teacher, family, doing well at school | “That one’s self should be determined in whatever they do, whether it’s sports or school or [anything].” | Understand the task, support from teachers, EAs, and friends, hands-on activities | Yes - “Because when you’re free and independent, you feel really good about accomplishing tasks.” |
| “To be alive.” | More wheelchair accessible places, being human, being loved | “Like I am determined to get out of school.” | Go out on your own | Yes - “Just being freer.” |
| “Doing the best you can with your circumstances and abilities. And being as, probably, independent as possible and relying on others but not being completely reliant on others.” | How you feel about yourself, how you come off to others, talking with others and having a good laugh, doing well in school/learning new things, being able to take the transit…gives independence | “Doing the best you can do at a task or something you want to do in life, sort of without giving up. Even if you have to do it differently than others, or it takes you longer, as long as you sort of did it yourself with, like minimal involvement of others, like not having to rely on others.” | Support for what you want to do from family, friends, and people at school, school resources | Yes - “If you have a sense of accomplishment that you’ve done things yourself, you’re probably going to have this perception that your quality of life is a lot better.” |
| “Waking up and feeling happy…Having a sense of purpose…also having a job that I feel serves people, or animals, or something like that.” | Having a good support team, talking with teens through similar situations, writing | “Being determined, like not backing down. Standing up for what you want, and what you need as a person.” | Self-confidence, having people believe in your goals, having people help you achieve your goals, not being afraid to ask for assistance, accessing care | Yes - “because as my self-confidence went down, my ability to be self-confident went down as well.” |
| “How a person lives…if they are in a wheelchair or if they can walk like you and I.” | Mom and Dad, IEP at school | Did not know | Buy a house on your own, able to keep up your own house | Yes - “Because you are able to do more things.” |
| “How satisfied you are with living.” | Being able to do what you like to do, a job you enjoy, friends, family, access to basic necessities, level of education, resources to go farther with learning | “Being motivated to achieve your goals.” | Motivation, interest, being able to express opinion, being able to live independently | Yes - “If I’m not motivated…I sort of stagnate I guess.” |
| “It makes me feel good.” | Friends, getting out, shopping, family, family dog, new walker | Did not know | Computer, accessible sink, exercises to make hand stronger, automatic garage door | Yes - “Because I like to try to be as independent as possible.” |
| “The value of your life and how much you think you are enjoying your life, or how good your life is for you.” | Friends, learning, parents, knowledge, health | “One’s willingness to do what they can to be all they can be. To strive through any situation, be it good, bad, ugly.” | Willpower, make your own food, pay your own rent, transportation | Yes - “You need to have self-determination in order to improve yourself and improve the circumstances around you for you to have a quality life.” |
| “What you do in life.” | Friends, family, a good job | “To have enough confidence to be yourself.” | Myself as a person, mother, learning from siblings | Yes - “You don’t want other people to influence who you should be.” |
| “To go do more better things with my life, living on my own.” | Eating healthy, grooming and hygiene, being nice to people, friends, family, eating out, nice bed to sleep in | Did not know | Making decisions and setting your mind, communicating with others | Yes - “Independency is like a number one priority for me.” |
| Did not know | Go see hockey, friends, help other people | Did not know | Having choices | Did not know |
| “Be a useful person and be happy.” | Away from parents, independence, hang out with friends, getting a high job | “I make my own choices.” | Freedom from parents, help from people, places that can help you work on getting an apartment | Yes - “I can make my own choice of what I think I’m good at.” |
QOL quality of life, SD self-determination, Definitions of QOL/SD and answers to how they are connected are verbatim quotes; factors related to QOL and contributors to SD is summarized information pulled from the transcripts
Participant goals and connection between SD and goals
| Participant goals | Connection between SD and goals |
|---|---|
| Not asked | Not asked |
| Not asked | Not asked |
| Travelling, living independently | “I just stay focused on my goals. I know that if I do one thing, I’m going to have to do something else first. I know I have to get a good paying job in order to reach those goals.” |
| Become a teacher, raise a family | “If you’re really self-determined…and you want to achieve, and want to become a teacher, [you] have to work really hard at college.” |
| Work as a marketer from home | “Graduate from school.” |
| Finish university, move out of family home | “Willing to put effort in myself in order to complete [university], it doesn’t just sort of happen by someone else’s power.” |
| Accessing care to live independently | “You don’t give up and you keep going…until you find someone that sees your goal or your dream to do something on your own.” |
| Pass college, get a job as a child and youth worker, get married | “[Learning] how to do things.” |
| Getting through college, finding a job | “This is what I want to do, not what someone else wants me to do.” |
| Work Get an apartment, get a job in the food industry, spend time with friends, travel | “I might need help with getting ready for work.” “I need the self-determination to be a responsible young adult and eventually adult, so that I can pay for my own items and look after myself without anyone’s help.” |
| Get an apartment, go to college | “Because I’m self-determined, I know that it’s something that I can set out and when I want to do it and I’ll be able to get through it, persevere through anything.” |
| Move out of parents’ home, get a better job | “I think of a light switch, you want to do this.” |
| Find a job, participate in recreational activities | Did not know |
| Work as an architect, live independently | “I just may need some help if I don’t know how to do it, but I have to make my own choice of what I’m doing, but I don’t like people telling me to make what choices.” |
QOL quality of life, SD self-determination, Participant goals are summarized information pulled from the transcripts; answers to how SD and goals are connected are verbatim quotes. Questions about goals and their connection with SD were added to the interview schedule after the first two interviews took place