| Literature DB >> 28462292 |
Cynthia L Murray1, Michelle Ploughman1, Chelsea Harris1, Stephen Hogan1, Michelle Murdoch2, Mark Stefanelli1.
Abstract
Despite the absence of scientific evidence demonstrating the efficacy of the "liberation procedure" in treating multiple sclerosis (MS), thousands of MS patients worldwide have undergone the procedure. The study objective was to explore the experience of liberation procedure decision making for individuals with MS. Fifteen adults in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, each participated in an in-depth interview. The data analysis revealed three groups of people: "waiters," "early embracers," and "late embracers." Using van Manen's hermeneutic phenomenological approach, we identified three themes each in the stories of the early and late embracers and four themes in the waiters' stories. A characteristic of the late embracers and waiters was skepticism, whereas desperation set the embracers apart from the waiters. With a deeper understanding of the experience, nurses can be more attuned to the perspectives of MS patients while helping them make informed decisions about undergoing the liberation procedure.Entities:
Keywords: decision making; health care, users’ experiences; hermeneutics; lay concepts and practices; lived experience; multiple sclerosis (MS); phenomenology; research, qualitative
Year: 2014 PMID: 28462292 PMCID: PMC5287319 DOI: 10.1177/2333393614551413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Qual Nurs Res ISSN: 2333-3936
Themes Identified in the Participants’ Stories of Decision Making Regarding the Liberation Procedure.
| Participant group | Theme |
|---|---|
| Early embracers | Jumping at a promising opportunity to get better |
| Desperately trying to ascend to a better quality of life | |
| Having no regrets | |
| Late embracers | Greeting the liberation procedure with skepticism |
| A last-ditch effort | |
| Risking everything | |
| Waiters | Putting the liberation procedure under the microscope |
| Skeptically refusing to jump or stay on the bandwagon | |
| Not wanting to rock the boat | |
| Waiting for credible research results |