| Literature DB >> 28837103 |
Sonya Meyer1, Sara Rosenblum2.
Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) is a food-related chronic condition and adherence to a strict gluten-free diet is the only available treatment. Adherence to the restrictive diet is challenging among children, especially adolescents. The aim was to describe existing knowledge about food-related activities, participation, and quality of life in daily life among children and adolescents with CD and to illuminate gaps in knowledge. The scoping review methodology was applied and literature searches were conducted in electronic databases. Twenty-three articles met the inclusion criteria. Food-related activities were identified, classified, and coded under the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health adapted for children and youth (ICF-CY) concepts of activities and participation. A wide variety of study populations, objectives, methods, and tools involving 55 different food-related activities were found. Incorporation of the ICF-CY concepts and quality of life captures new insights into everyday challenges. Reviewing the CD literature using this different lens reveals areas yet to receive sufficient attention. Further research can deepen the understanding of daily functioning of children with CD and the underlying skills required to participate in daily food-related activities while adhering to the diet. This can lead to the development of standardized disease-specific assessment tools and suitable intervention programs.Entities:
Keywords: Celiac disease; ICF-CY; food-related activities; gluten-free diet; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28837103 PMCID: PMC5622689 DOI: 10.3390/nu9090929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health: Children and Youth Version [8]. Reproduced with permission of the World Health Organization.
Figure 2Flow diagram describing the search and inclusion process.
Articles included in the scoping review.
| Author/s | Key Words | Participants | Ages in Years | Type of Study | Constructs Measured |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Altobelli et al., 2013 [ | N/A | 10–18 | Quantitative | CD specific questions-frequency of negative feelings (e.g., feel angry, bad, embarrassed), | |
| Arnone and Fitzsimons, 2012 [ | N/A | Adolescence | Review | Psychological aspects of CD | |
| Bacigalupe and Plocha, 2015 [ | adherence; CD; family rituals; GFD; social support | 6–12 | Qualitative interviews | Family challenges and strategies | |
| Barrio Torres et al., 2016 [ | disease-specific questionnaire; outcome health; transcultural adaptation | 10–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Bellini et al., 2011 [ | N/A | 6–16 | Quantitative | QOL scale (e.g., feeling embarrassed; feeling unhappy giving up some group activities due to temptation not to follow the GFD) | |
| Biagetti et al., 2013 [ | QOL; CD; GFD; children; lived experiences; psycho-social aspects | 2–18 | Qualitative open ended questions | Emotional impact of GFD on everyday life | |
| Biagetti et al., 2015 [ | Child; GFD; HRQOL | 2–18 | Quantitative | QOL; impact of GFD on social life | |
| Bongiovanni et al., 2010 [ | Pediatric; sprue; QOL | 7–17 | Quantitative | General well-being; emotional outlook; self-perception (e.g., difficulty doing) | |
| Cederborg et al., 2011 [ | adaption process; children; coeliac disease; parental perspective | 3–5; 16–17 | Qualitative interviews | Parental perspective of living with CD | |
| Chauhan et al., 2010 [ | CD; GFD; compliance; QOL | 2–17 | Interview consisted of a self-administered questionnaire | Effect of CD on child′s feeling | |
| de Lorenzo et al., 2012 [ | CD; QOL; child; parents | 5–12 | Quantitative | Leisure | |
| Jordan et al., 2013 [ | CD; children; focus groups, GFD; HRQOL | 8–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Lins et al., 2015 [ | QoL; Cross-cultural adaptation; CD | 8–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| MacCulloch and Rashid, 2014 [ | Adherence; CD; compliance; GFD | 2–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Meyer and Rosenblum, 2016 [ | CD; child; leisure activities; parents; QOL; self-report | 8–15 | Quantitative | HRQOL, Leisure | |
| Olsson et al., 2008 [ | Adolescent; CD; focus groups; GFD; patient compliance | 15–18 | Qualitative focus groups | Views of everyday life with coeliac disease and a prescription of a GFD | |
| Olsson et al., 2009 [ | Adolescent; chronic illness; focus groups; lived experiences; social constructionism; stigma | 15–18 | Qualitative focus groups | The GFD can produce stigma experiences in adolescence | |
| Pico and Spirito, 2014 [ | QOL, children/adolescents, CD, CDDUX, sensitivity to change | 8–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Roma et al., 2010 [ | Children; CD; compliance; GFD; life style | 5–14.5 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Rosén et al., 2011 [ | N/A | 13.9–15.4 | Qualitative interviews | ||
| Skjerning et al., 2014 [ | CD; HRQOL; Children; Adolescents/youth; Coping; focus groups; illness and disease; chronic | 8–18 | Qualitative focus group interviews | HRQOL | |
| van Doorn et al., 2008 [ | CD; QOL; disease specific questionnaire; proxy | 8–18 | Quantitative | HRQOL | |
| Veen et al., 2012 [ | Discursive psychology, coeliac disease, family mealtime, discourse analysis, experience of illness | 2–20 | Qualitative | Conversation about the food during meals |
* = hand searched articles; N/A = not available; CD = celiac disease; CDDUX = celiac disease DUX; GFD = gluten-free diet; QoL = quality of life; HRQoL = health related quality of life.
Activities and participation first- and second-level ICF classification.
| ICF Classification | Food-Related Activities | |
|---|---|---|
| d9 Community, social, and civic life | ||
d920 Recreation and leisure | Eating at restaurants | 8 [ |
| Parties/birthday parties | 7 [ | |
| Social functions/events | 7 [ | |
| Eating/dining out with friends | 6 [ | |
| Travelling | 4 [ | |
| Eating at a friend’s house | 3 [ | |
| Vacations | 2 [ | |
| Once each: Picnics; visiting people/family [ | 1 | |
d910 Community life | Summer camp | 2 [ |
| Sports camp | 1 [ | |
| d8 Major life areas-education | ||
d835 School life and related activities | Food situations/activities/events at school | 7 [ |
| Given gluten foods at school | 5 [ | |
| Eating at school cafeteria/canteen | 4 [ | |
| Meals/eating at school/daycare | 4 [ | |
| Eating with friends at school | 2 [ | |
| Once each: school parties; after-school activities [ | 1 | |
| d5 Self-care | ||
d570 Looking after one’s health | Not being able to eat anything/ Paying attention to what I eat/ not eating what others eat/ frustrated about not eating something you want | 6 [ |
| Following a lifelong diet/ following a diet for my CD/angry about having to follow a special diet | 6 [ | |
| thinking of gluten food | 5 [ | |
| Offered gluten food | 5 [ | |
| Having CD | 5 [ | |
| Once each: meals at home [ | 1 | |
d550 Eating | Eating with the family | 2 [ |
| Having meals | 1 [ | |
| d3 Communication | ||
d350 Conversation | Talking about CD | 5 [ |
| Explaining about CD | 5 [ | |
| Talking about CD to friends | 5 [ | |
| d6 Domestic life | ||
d620 Acquisition of goods and services | Determining if food is GF or not from the food label | 2 [ |
| Finding GF food in stores | 1 [ | |
| d7 Interpersonal interactions and relationships | ||
d740 Formal relationships | Feel teachers do not understand | 2 [ |
| Talking to school staff | 1 [ | |
| d2 General tasks and demands | ||
d230 Carrying out daily routine | Once each: eating at home [ | 1 |
n = incidence in which the food-related activities are mentioned in the reviewed articles; CD = celiac disease; GF = gluten free; ICF = International classification of functioning, disability, and health.