| Literature DB >> 28620627 |
Ann Gill Taylor1, Katharine E Adelstein1, Tamara G Fischer-White1, Maheswari Murugesan1, Joel G Anderson1.
Abstract
Perceptions of people living with chronic illness change over time, contributing to health-related stress that necessitates coping skills. Paterson's shifting perspectives model provides an explanation of chronically ill people's variations in attention to their symptoms. In this qualitative study, 20 people with fibromyalgia living in a rural setting were interviewed in 2013 with the aim of gaining insight into their experiences and the meaning-making associated with their chronic condition. Analysis of the interview data categorized five recurrent, or common, themes: experiences of loss, feelings of fear and uncertainty, influence of stress, stigmatization of the disease, and coping through courage. Difficulties attendant to losses, distress, and stigma associated with this chronic condition led the participants to report poor health-related quality of life. The study findings can be useful across clinical settings to nurses and other health care providers in understanding those diagnosed with fibromyalgia and their care needs.Entities:
Keywords: chronic; content analysis; fatigue / exhaustion; fibromyalgia; interviews; nursing; pain; qualitative; quality of life; research; semistructured; stress / distress
Year: 2016 PMID: 28620627 PMCID: PMC5459348 DOI: 10.1177/2333393616658141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Qual Nurs Res ISSN: 2333-3936
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria[ |
|---|---|
| Physician-diagnosed fibromyalgia | Current use of steroids or use of these drugs within the past 3 months |
| Current age between 18–64 years | Currently pregnant (women) |
| Ability to speak and write in English |
The two exclusion criteria were relevant only to the quantitative component of the study assessing the immune cells (Taylor et al., 2015) but were necessarily applied to all participants.
Demographic Characteristics.
| Characteristic | Participants ( |
|---|---|
| Age | 49.1 ± 9.56 |
| Sex | |
| Female | 19 (95.0%) |
| Male | 1 (5.0%) |
| Race | |
| White/Caucasian | 16 (80.0%) |
| Black/African American | 4 (20.0%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Non-Hispanic | 17 (85.0%) |
| No response | 3 (15.0%) |
| Marital/partner status | |
| Married/partnered | 12 (60.0%) |
| Divorced/separated | 5 (25.0%) |
| Single | 3 (15.0%) |
| Years of education | 14.5 ± 2.37 |
| Years with fibromyalgia | 9.63 ± 11.17[ |
| FIQ score | 71.20 ± 12.81[ |
Notes. FIQ = Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire.
Time since FM diagnosis ranged from <1 year to 27 years, with no differences in the meaning of the disease reported by those at the ends of the spectrum.
FIQ scores ranged from 20 to 100, with 90% (n = 18) of participants’ scores ranging from 60 to 95, that is, high disease impact (Bennett, Bushmakin, Cappelleri, Zlateva, & Sadosky, 2009; Burckhardt, Clark, & Bennett, 1991). FIQ scores reflect the disease severity level. Review of the data for the two participants whose FIQ total score was less than 60 did not reveal anything distinct or different that would set them apart from those who scored higher on the FIQ (high disease impact) nor did they reveal any differences regarding life events surrounding the time of onset of their FM as compared with those in the high disease impact group.
Figure 1.Linkage of study concepts, study themes, and theoretical models.
Note. Two frameworks are used to show the linkages among the study concepts and themes (blue boxes) in relation to the person with fibromyalgia, including (a) an adaptation of Paterson’s (2001) shifting perspectives model of chronic illness (orange boxes) and (b) Lazarus and Folkman’s (1984) ways of coping model (green boxes). We present information in the fashion of concentric circles to emphasize the interconnectedness between the study themes and the constructs of the two models. Paterson’s shifting perspectives model shows how the participants assess their chronic condition. The participants’ ways of coping are illustrated within Lazarus and Folkman’s ways of coping model. Our study model demonstrates a multidirectional flow, suggesting the influence of one set of elements upon another.