| Literature DB >> 31409325 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) are a group of incurable and inherited eye conditions, and the leading cause of inherited blindness in people under the age of 60. The aim of this systematic review and meta-synthesis was to present a comprehensive overview of qualitative papers on experiences and coping strategies of adults living with RP, and how these influence quality of life.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31409325 PMCID: PMC6693213 DOI: 10.1186/s12886-019-1169-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Ophthalmol ISSN: 1471-2415 Impact factor: 2.209
Search criteria and search terms using the CHIP tool [19]
| Context | How | Issues of Interest | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experiences of adults living with retinitis pigmentosa | Qualitative studies; mixed studies with a qualitative approach | Coping strategies; quality of life | Adults (aged 18 years or more) with retinitis pigmentosa |
‘experienc*’ AND ‘retinitis pigmentosa*’ OR ‘retinal’ OR ‘pigmentary retinopathy’ OR ‘rod-cone dystrophy’ OR ‘RP’ OR ‘tapetoretinal degeneration’ | ‘qualitative’ OR ‘qualitative methods’ OR ‘interview*’ OR ‘focus group*’ OR ‘case stud*’ OR ‘ethnograph*’ OR ‘narrativ*’ | ‘quality of life’ OR ‘qol’ OR ‘life satisfaction’ OR ‘wellbeing’ OR ‘feeling’ OR ‘coping’ OR ‘perceptions’ | ‘adult’ NOT child* |
Note. Various combinations of these search terms were used for MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, PsycARTICLES, CINAHL, Scopus, PubMed, The Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, and Web of Science databases. Search terms were entered as ‘topic’ or ‘all text’
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart showing literature search, study selection, and included articles for meta-synthesis
Assessment of article quality based on Critical Skills Appraisal Programme tool for assessing qualitative research
| Study | Is the recruitment strategy appropriate? | Researcher-participant relationship considered? | Ethical issues considered? | Rigorous data analysis? | Overall score (out of 10) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. An et al., 2014 [ | Yes | No | Yes | No | 8 |
| 2. Bittner et al., 2010 [ | Can’t tell | Yes | Yes | Can’t tell | 8 |
| 3. Falchetti et al., 2016 [ | Yes | No | Can’t tell | Yes | 8 |
| 4. Fourie, 2007 [ | Yes | No | No | Yes | 8 |
| 5. Hayeems et al., 2005 [ | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
| 6. Schakel et al., 2017 [ | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
| 7. Senthil et al., 2017a [ | Yes | Can’t tell | Yes | Yes | 9 |
| 8. Senthil et al., 2017b [ | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
| 9. Spiegel et al., 2016 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 10 |
| 10. Thetford et al., 2011 [ | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | 9 |
| 11. Thurston, 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 10 |
| 12. Thurston et al., 2010 [ | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 10 |
Note. Columns have been omitted where all articles were rated ‘yes’. The following questions have been omitted: “Are the research questions clear?”; “Is a qualitative methodology appropriate?”; “Is the research design appropriate?”; “Has data been collected in a way that addresses the research issue?”; “Clear statement of findings?”; and “How valuable is the research?”
Characteristics of papers eligible for inclusion in the systematic review and meta-synthesis
| Record number | Authors, Year | Country & setting | Research aims | Sample: | Data collection method, average interview duration (mins), interviewer | Data analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | An et al., 2014 [ | Republic of Korea, Korean RP Society | To investigate health behaviours of people with RP, qualitatively exploring reasons for unhealthy diet and physical inactivity | Semi-structured interviews with 5 participants with RP, 120 mins, ND | Possibly inductive thematic analysis; ND | |
| 2 | Bittner et al., 2010 [ | USA, Johns Hopkins Wilmer Eye Institute | Understand how people with RP cope with and manage the stress generated from progressive vision loss and fluctuations in vision in daily life and explore preferences for different coping strategies | Online focus groups (2, 3, 3 participants), 90 mins, 2 moderators with one experienced, but no previous experience with RP patients | Possibly inductive thematic analysis; ND | |
| 3 | Falchetti et al., 2016 [ | Brazil, Dorina Nowill Foundation | To examine the vulnerability perceived by blind consumers in the marketplace | Semi-structured interview, 55 mins, ND | Interpretative phenomenological analysis (Smith and Osborn, 2007) | |
| 4 | Fourie, 2007 [ | Ireland | Self-study to better understand researcher’s own personal identity and attitudes to blindness following a diagnosis of RP, to transform private experience in to public insight and solutions | Analysis of 12 emails to family, friends and colleagues pertaining to RP and issues around blindness experiences from 3 months prior to 3 months after receiving a long white mobility cane, researcher as participant | Self-study according to guidance by Bullough and Pinnegar (2012) | |
| 5 | Hayeems et al., 2005 [ | USA, Baltimore chapter of the Foundation Fighting Blindness and the Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins Hospital | To explore the process of adjusting to RP and develop a model for ophthalmologists to consider and lessen patients’ suffering. | Semi-structured interviews (45 mins), focus groups (2 h), 2 trained moderators | Interview and focus group data combined, and analyzed according to Straus and Corbin (1998) | |
| 6 | Schakel et al., 2017 [ | The Netherlands, two large Dutch low vision rehabilitation organizations | To explore the patient perspective of perceived symptoms, causes, consequences, and coping strategies to deal with fatigue in Dutch adults with visual impairment. | Semi-structured in-depth interviews, 90 mins, interviewer was a male psychologist | Approach similar to framework method, combining deductive and inductive forms of analysis and a thematic analysis of data | |
| 7 | Senthil et al., 2017a [ | Australia, Royal Society for the Blind & Retina Australia | To explore quality of life issues of people with vitreoretinal diseases to develop group-specific item banks. | 79 (32 hereditary retinal diseases of which 23 had RP, and 47 acquired retinal diseases), median age 57 (ranging from 44 to 69) for hereditary group, | Semi-structured interviews (45 mins), female lead author as interviewer | Phenomenological approach to data analysis |
| 8 | Senthil et al., 2017b [ | Australia, Royal Society for the Blind & Retina Australia | Explore and understand the issues and impact of people with RP on quality of life | Semi-structured telephone interviews, female lead author as interviewer | Inductive analysis approach according to Straus and Corbin (1998) | |
| 9 | Spiegel et al., 2016 [ | USA | Describe the interplay between the work trajectories and the passing patterns of individuals with degenerative eye conditions in different phases of career and disease progression. Secondly, to describe the career and wellbeing outcomes associated with different work trajectories and with various concealment and passing pathways | Face to face and telephone semi-structured interviews, interviewer was a female sociologist | Grounded theory approach to data analysis | |
| 10 | Thetford et al., 2011 [ | United Kingdom, voluntary organizations | To examine the long-term needs of people with sight loss and barriers faced by people living with sight loss in accessing the support they need over time. | Face to face individual BNI and semi-structured interviews, 45 mins, ND | Biographical-narrative interpretative method (Wengraf, 2001; 2005) analyzed thematically (Gifford, 1998; Miles and Huberman, 1994) | |
| 11 | Thurston, 2010 [ | United Kingdom, Blind and Partially Sighted Society and British Retinitis Pigmentosa Society | To examine counselling experiences of blind and partially sighted adults in four core areas (mood, self-concept, social connectedness, and loss) to identify their needs, enabling recommendations for future policy and practice. | Face to face and telephone interviews lasting between 1 h to 90 min, female researcher who became legally blind later in life interviewed participants | Data analyzed using a grounded theory approach informed by Strauss and Corbin (1990) | |
| 12 | Thurston et al., 2010 [ | United Kingdom, Blind and Partially Sighted Society and British Retinitis Pigmentosa Society | To explore the emotional impact of sight loss in mood, self-concept, social connectedness, and loss | Face to face and telephone interviews lasting between 1 h to 90 min, female researcher who was legally blind later in life interviewed participants | Data analyzed using a grounded theory approach informed by Strauss and Corbin (1990) |
Note: ND No data, RP retinitis pigmentosa, N total sample size of study, n sample size of participants with RP, x mean age, SD standard deviation
Themes from articles informing the development and definitions of meta-themes
| Meta-synthesis theme titles and definitions | Themes from eligible papers | Articlesa |
|---|---|---|
Emotional and psychosocial intra-individual experiences linked to making sense of RP, adapting to changing sense of identity, and negotiating the need for independence and reliance on others or tools. | Responses to diagnosis shock, fear, panic, disbelief, devastation, negative emotional states, and loss of confidence, loss of independence and freedom, loss of future plans, searching for reasons why RP has happened to them, acceptance of activities that may no longer be possible due to vision impairment, likening sight loss to bereavement, tension in fight to maintain independence as vision worsens, feeling like a burden to others, reliance on others perceived as an inconvenience, using assistive technology to maintain independence, mobility cane symbolic of loss of independence and also enables greater exploration of one’s environment, acting blind enough to warrant cane use, the transition from being sighted to a person with vision impairment, acceptance of vision impairment. | 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11, 12 |
Practical and emotional issues people with RP need to cope with on a daily basis at an intra-individual level. | Difficulty performing daily tasks, e.g. reading, seeing in changing light conditions, shopping, driving, playing sports, taking part in leisure activities, doing household chores, preparing healthy meals, need for more complex travel plans due to challenges in the external environment, fatigue, fear, isolation, vulnerability, diminished emotion regulation capacity, judgements and stigma of self and from others about people with vision impairment, being patronized or treated as if they had low intelligence from others, social interactions challenging due to inability to identify social cues resulting in less participation in social events. | 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 |
Inter-individual experiences of people with RP with healthcare professionals, assumptions about counselling and therapy, other formal support services, and interactions with informal others. | Not feeling understood by healthcare professionals or members in support group leading to isolation, language used by physicians/clinicians led to feelings of devastation, anxiety, and hopefulness, need for factual, practical, and emotional information at time of diagnosis from healthcare professionals, resistance to counselling and therapy, counselling helpful to alleviate anxiety, wanting opportunities to talk about feelings at the time of diagnosis, clarification and expected outcomes related to counseling, power imbalance between patient and clinician leading to feelings of lack of autonomy, distrust of sighted counsellor, more trusting of counsellor living with a visual impairment, reliance on family members for daily activities, need for good role models living with RP, understanding legal position in society, statutory protection, and constitutional rights. | 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12 |
Adaptive (problem-focused and emotion-focused strategies) and maladaptive coping strategies reported to be used by people living with RP. | Problem-focused coping strategies: scheduling events to coincide with best vision, planning ahead, allowing more time in new and unfamiliar places, using gadgets and tools for daily activities, communicating with others who have RP, obtaining factual information about RP, communicating with others about practical and emotional support needs; emotion-focused coping strategies: downward social comparison, being grateful for abilities retained, humour and laughter, social integration, hope for a cure, permission to vent, gripe, and complain for stress relief, being open about RP less stressful than engaging in passing behaviours for a person with sight, faith; maladaptive coping strategies: smoking, eating unhealthily, and reduced physical activity. | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 12 |
The impact of RP on interactions with others and organizational systems linked to a work and career context, and how these may influence coping strategies and quality of life. | Changing jobs; finding jobs to suit ability as eye condition worsens; reduced job opportunities; challenges with employment led to financial constraints; sense of worry over career; concerns over being useful in the workplace; concerns over workplace being accommodating to progressive vision loss; concealing RP for fear of discrimination, termination, or being treated as less capable or incompetent; relief and reduction in stress after revealing RP status to others; lack of protective laws as reason for not disclosing RP status; revealing RP status once in a secure and relatively high status; taking early retirement. | 4, 8, 9 |
Note. a Article numbers correspond to numbering presented in Tables 2 and 3
Fig. 2Conceptual model of how meta-themes may relate to influence coping strategies and quality of life in people with RP. Notes. Titles italicised show conceptualization of higher-level links made between the aims of the meta-synthesis and the meta-themes (non-italicised) identified from the papers included in the review. Numbering corresponds to order of meta-themes presented in Table 4