| Literature DB >> 30886993 |
Fran Toye1,2, Kate Seers3, Karen Louise Barker1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes joint inflammation. It affects around 400,000 people in the UK and 1 million adults in the USA. Given the appropriate treatment, many can have relatively few symptoms. It is therefore important to understand what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis and gain insight into peoples' decisions about utilising healthcare. The aims of this study were: (1) to bring together qualitative evidence syntheses that explore patients' experience of living with rheumatoid arthritis and (2) develop a conceptual understanding of what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis.Entities:
Keywords: Meta-ethnography; Patient experience; Qualitative evidence synthesis; Qualitative research; Rheumatoid arthritis; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 30886993 PMCID: PMC6390589 DOI: 10.1186/s41927-018-0049-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Rheumatol ISSN: 2520-1026
Example of search terms used for PsychInfo
| QES terms | (“qualitative evidence synthesis”).ti,ab |
| (QES).ti,ab | |
| (metasynthes* OR meta-synthes* OR “meta synthesis”).ti,ab | |
| (metasummar* OR meta-summar* OR “meta summary”).ti,ab | |
| (metastud* OR meta-stud* OR “meta study”).ti,ab | |
| (metaethnog* OR meta-ethnog* OR “meta ethnography”).ti,ab | |
| (“critical interpretive synthesis”).ti,ab | |
| (“realist synthesis”).ti,ab | |
| (“thematic synthesis”).ti,ab | |
| (qualitative ADJ4 systematic*).ti,ab | |
| (qualitative ADJ4 review).ti,ab | |
| (qualitative ADJ4 synthes*).ti,ab | |
| (noblit ADJ4 hare).ti,ab | |
| Combined with | exp PAIN/ |
| Limits | none |
Fig. 1Flowchart of search process
Author, year, aim, method of QES, number of participants, and number of concepts included
| Author, year | Aim of study | Analytic method | Number of primary studies | Analytic output | Countries included |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Campbell & colleagues 2011 [ | To explore experiences related to the aetiology, treatment, management and lived experience of rheumatoid | META-ETHNOGRAPHY | 25 | 6 themes | 13 UK, 7 USA, 2 Canada, 1 Denmark, 1 Sweden, 1 New Zealand |
| Daker-white, donovan & campbell 2014 [ | To synthesize published qualitative studies concerning the lived experience of rheumatoid arthritis | META-ETHNOGRAPHY | 40 | 4 themes | Not specified in original article |
| Fedderson& colleagues 2017 [ | To derive new conceptual understanding about how women with rheumatoid arthritis manage their illness, motherhood and paid work | META-SYNTHESIS | 6 | 4 themes | 2 Denmark, 1 USA, 1 UK, I Canada, 1 Sweden |
| Hoving & colleagues 2013 [ | To summarize qualitative studies that explore experiences of patients with inflammatory arthritis to remain employed or return to work | THEMATIC ANALYSIS | 10 | 6 themes | 3 UK, 3 Netherlands, 1 Canada, 1 USA, 1 Sweden, 1 Ireland |
| Hulen & colleagues 2016 [ | To identify needs, goals and expectations of rheumatoid arthritis patients | GROUNDED THEORY | 13 | 3 themes | 9 UK, 3 Holland, 2 Japan, 2 Sweden, 1 Canada, 1 Norway, 1 China, Japan and USA |
| Kelly & colleagues 2017 [ | To describe patients’ experiences of Disease Modifying Anti-Rheumatic Drugs (DMARDS) in rheumatoid arthritis and spondyloarthritis | THEMATIC SYNTHESIS | 55 | 25 subthemes (6 themes) | 25 UK, 5 USA, 5 Netherlands, 5 Canada, 4 Sweden, 2 Australia, 2 Belgium, 1 Austria, 1 Denmark, 1 Germany, 1 Ireland, 1 Turkey, 1 Norway, 1 Netherlands, Austria and UK |
| Lin & colleagues 2011 [ | To describe the status of spiritual well-being in patients with rheumatoid arthritis | META-SUMMARY | 10 | 18 subthemes (4 themes) | 4 UK, 3 USA, 1 Canada, 1 South Korea, 1 Sweden |
| Stack & colleagues 2011 [ | To explore the drivers of and barriers to help-seeking behaviour in people with a new onset of rheumatoid arthritis. | GROUNDED THEORY | 21 | 5 themes | 8 UK, 6 Canada, 4 USA, 1 Australia, 1 South Africa, 1 Sweden |
| Stack & colleagues 2013 [ | To identify the earliest symptoms associated with the onset of rheumatoid arthritis | GROUNDED THEORY | 26 | 5 themes | 11 UK, 6 USA, 4 Canada, 1 Australia, 1 Austria, 1 South Korea, 1 South Africa |
aNumbers of studies obtained by direct author correspondence as lacked clarity in original study
QES supporting each conceptual category
| Theme | Campbell & colleagues 2011 [ | Daker-white, Donovan & Campbell 2014 [ | Fedderson& Colleagues 2017 [ | Hoving & colleagues 2013 [ | Hulen & colleagues 2016 [ | Kelly & colleagues 2017 [ | Lin & colleagues 2011 [ | Stack & colleagues 2011 [ | Stack & colleagues 2013 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rheumatoid arthritis is in control of my body | X | X | X | X | Studies explore experience of Disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDS) | X | X | ||
| Rheumatoid arthritis alters reciprocity | X | X | X | X | X | ||||
| Rheumatoid arthritis is an emotional challenge | X | X | X | X | |||||
| The challenge of balancing roles | X | X | |||||||
| rheumatoid arthritis disrupts mx present and future self | X | X | X | ||||||
| rheumatoid arthritis is variable and unpredictable | X | X | X | X | X | ||||
| rheumatoid arthritis is invisible | X | X | X | X | |||||
| i am trying to make sense of what is happening | X | X | X | ||||||
| i need a positive experience of healthcare | X | X | |||||||
| Reframing the situation is precarious | X | X | X | X |
Fig. 2Conceptual model: (a) living precariously with rheumatoid arthritis & (b) reframing the situation. Presents our conceptual model: (a) Rheumatoid arthritis controls my body and alters the reciprocity of my relationships. It is an emotional challenge and balancing roles is precarious. Rheumatoid arthritis disrupts who I am and my vision for the future. I try to make sense of what is happening but my condition is unpredictable, variable, and sometimes invisible. A positive experience of healthcare would give some stability in this precarious situation. (b) Reframing the situation and living well with rheumatoid arthritis means finding a balance between independence and dependence: accepting the body’s imitations and realising that it is OK to seek and accept help. Focus on personal growth, think positively and find purpose
Disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDS) – Kelly & Colleagues 2017 [66]
| Maintaining control | Patients wanted full information about DMARDs so that they could make their own choice. Some were prepared to accept complications and would take extreme risks. |
| Distressing uncertainties & consequences | Some were worried about the safety of DMARDs and were uncertain about their efficacy: ‘My orthopaedist said: “arthritis patients actually have two diseases, that is arthritis and methotrexate”; I have always remembered that.’ |
| Negotiating treatment expectations | Emotional responses to DMARDs hinged on impact, or expected impact of medication. For some Biologic DMARDs were seen as the last hope. Some were disappointed with the effects; for others, the effects exceeded hopes. |
| Powerful social influences | Family, friends, doctors and nurses could have a strong influence on the decision to take DMARDS. Patients needed to have confidence in the doctor, yet experience of healthcare was variable. |
| Privilege and right of access to biologics | Some felt it was a privilege to take biologic DMARDS and could feel guilty. Others felt that everyone with RA had a right to be prescribed. Some were very worried about DMARDs being withdrawn and hid any side effects. |
| Intensifying disease identity | Some were shocked about being prescribed ‘strong’ medications and felt this was a sign of increasing disease severity. Some felt dependent on lifelong medication which made them contemplate the incurability of RA. |
This table summarise the findings from Kelly and colleagues ‘Patients’ attitudes and experiences of disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs in rheumatoid arthritis and spondyloarthritis: A qualitative synthesis’ [66]