| Literature DB >> 31940409 |
Jude des Bordes1, Seema Prasad2, Greg Pratt3, Maria E Suarez-Almazor1, Maria A Lopez-Olivo1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with low bone density or osteoporosis need information for effective prevention or disease management, respectively. However, patients may not be getting enough information from their primary care providers or other sources. Inadequate disease information leaves patients ill-informed and creates misconceptions and unnecessary concerns about the disease.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940409 PMCID: PMC6961946 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram of study selection.
Characteristics of the studies included in our metasynthesis.
| Study | Country | Population | Number of participants | Methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK | Female employees at a Scottish university, aged 40-55 years | 36 | In-depth interviews | |
| Australia | Iranian men and women living in Australia, aged 35-77 years | 42 men, 131 women | Interviews and focus groups | |
| UK | Women with osteoporosis, aged 69 ± 10.1 years | 14 | Semi-structured interviews/drawings | |
| USA | Adult volunteers, aged 65 years or older (mean 75.5 years) | 15 (11 women) | Semi-structured interviews | |
| USA | Postmenopausal women with a history of minimal trauma fractures, aged 61 ± 8 years | 29 | Prospective studies and focus group (mixed methods) | |
| USA | White women, aged 30-55 years | 39 | Focus groups | |
| Denmark | White women, aged 52-53 years | 17 | In-depth interview | |
| USA | Patients with osteoporosis and receiving osteoporosis medication, aged 65-85 years | 32 (30 women) | Focus groups | |
| USA | Female residents of an assisted living facility who had osteoporosis, aged 71-93 years | 5 | Semi-structured interviews | |
| Canada | Postmenopausal women receiving osteoporosis medication | 37 | Focus groups | |
| USA | Postmenopausal women in a managed care plan who had osteoporosis, aged 73.4 ± 6.2 years | 36 | In-depth telephone interviews | |
| Denmark | Men diagnosed with osteoporosis, aged 51-82 years | 16 | Focus groups | |
| Denmark and UK | Men and women diagnosed with osteoporosis, aged 50-84 years | 20 women and 6 men | Semi-structured interviews and participant observation | |
| UK | Women with osteoporosis, aged 65-76 years | 11 | Focus groups | |
| Denmark | Healthy women, aged 60-61 years | 22 | Focus groups | |
| Denmark | Women, aged 60 years | 16 | In-depth interviews | |
| UK | Women with clinical indicators of low bone mineral density, aged 33-81 years | 15 | In-depth interviews | |
| USA | Women diagnosed with osteoporosis, aged 53-89 years | 21 | Focus groups | |
| Denmark | Women in a study of the efficacy of a screening program to prevent fracture, aged 65-80 years | 31 | Focus groups, interviews | |
| Canada | Women and men, aged 47-80 years | 18 women 6 men | Focus groups | |
| Canada | Men and women with a history of osteoporosis-related fractures, aged 65-88 years | 6 men and 15 women | Semi-structured interviews | |
| Norway | Women invited for bone mineral densitometry, aged 55-75 years | 72 women | Focus groups | |
| USA | Men with osteoporosis, aged 53-86 years | 23 | Semi-structured interviews | |
| USA | African-American women, aged 67-86 years | 16 | Focus groups | |
| UK | Women from a population-based screening trial, aged 68-79 years | 10 | In-depth interviews |
Plus/minus age values represent—means and standard deviations; Ranges are displayed with a dash.
Fig 2Quality assessment of included studies.
Themes and subthemes with supporting quotations from participants.
| Theme | Some supporting quotations |
|---|---|
| | “All as I understand, I don’t understand medical terms, but I think it’s an aging of the bones, and the bones can become fragile, and become brittle and they easily break.” (Richardson et al 2002 [ |
| “…Actually, I don’t even know…what [osteoporosis] actually does to your body or your bones or whatever it is.” (Burgener et al 2005 [ | |
| “I mean I think up until a few years ago I mean no one had really heard of osteoporosis. I mean you heard someone’s mother fell and she broke her wrist or something like that, but you never thought it, you just said she was frail or she was older, it always happens” (Backet-Milburn et al 2000 [ | |
| “I think the crumbling starts, the deterioration of the bones, is most likely to be around the joints where they get wear and tear and that kind of thing. I think it’s to do with little crystals forming…. I presume osteoporosis is something like osteoarthritis.” (Weston et al 2011 [ | |
| “…I know that I will never get over it. I am hoping that it can be controlled. I seem to be running downhill with it. I hope that I can better control the pain part of it—control to a point—to forestall severe injury. I am hoping that I’m not going to die with it further in that it is.” (Solimeo et al 2011 [ | |
| “You don’t get rid of it, do you?” (Besser et al 2012 [ | |
| | “Exercise, not just the calcium, but exercise is the key….” (Hagy et al 2000 [ |
| “Well, I may be rather stupid, but…I was told to take 1000 mg of calcium and 400 IU of vitamin D and I go into the drugstore and there are all these different types of calcium, some of them less than that…some of them got vitamin D included…. I found out that my multivitamin has got 400 IU of vitamin D, so do I take the calcium with that one? But I got to take another calcium at night, so I’m going insane and my hands are full of little scraps of paper with what different people have told me to take.” (Sale et al 2010 [ | |
| “I don’t care how much calcium you got…. I don’t care how strong [the bone] is, even an iron can break.” (Burgener et al 2005 [ | |
| “Certainly I have some osteopenia and my bone density tests which I’ve had over the last four years, it has gone down a small amount each time.” (Sale et al 2014 [ | |
| | “…They (my doctors) found out that I had broken this wrist in 1999 and ankle in 2006 so they suggested that I have the bone density. I don’t understand because it was my wrist and ankle and they checked my back and my hip.” (Sale et al 2010 [ |
| “I haven’t seen [osteoporosis literature] other than describing what [osteoporosis] is and that [bisphosphonates] can help it. I think [bisphosphonates] may actually help it in the sense it strengthens your bones. But it doesn’t help with the pain! … It may help me in the future from a future fracture or something. But it doesn’t help the pain here and now. I think it’s a little misleading to people. [laughs] It’s a preventive type of thing, you know. You see it on TV all the time. You know ‘once a month pills’ or ‘once a week pill’ to help prevent a fracture, but, you know, ‘What do you do once you’ve got it?’” (Solimeo et al 2011 [ | |
| | “If I was in a lot of pain then I’d know that I was in a really bad way, but I’m not, so osteoporosis can’t be that much of a serious problem. Otherwise it’d hurt, and I’d know beyond doubt that it was in my body, um, bones, and causing me lots of trouble.” (Weston et al 2011 [ |
| “I have no problems at all—I had a broken heel and fractures in the back, but now I have no problems…. I am cutting my hedge with arm pads.” (Nielsen et al 2011 [ | |
| “Like I said, I dance, I jump, I fall down, I get up, I plant, I dig, I plant, I do everything I want. Don’t have a problem. If I do have a problem, I’ll probably do most anything to try to fix it.” (Mazor et al 2010 [ | |
| “I feel that [the osteoporosis] is not as life threatening. And certainly at this point is not as serious of a disease, but of course it could change.” (Jachna et al 2005 [ | |
| “…It isn’t something you die of.” (Rothman et al 2014 [ | |
| “I’ve got friends who’ve got much worse things wrong with them. I mean, I could have lung cancer or dementia—those poor souls. Now that would be serious and something to worry about. But at least I can take these tablets and be all right. I think I’m lucky that I haven’t got anything much to worry about really.” (Weston et al 2011 [ | |
| “…We keep everything inside we’ll get sick and it will affect our bones…it burns our bones from the inside.” (Baheiraei et al 2006 [ | |
| “I think they simply didn’t know anything about it, our mothers and grandmothers. If they were hunchbacked it was because of the toil…they had very tough lives then our grannies, so they had reason to bend over, to put it that way….” (Skolbekken et al 2008 [ | |
| “I guess having children takes…a lot of calcium out of the bones…. And nursing I think does too. That’s why women have more problems with [osteoporosis] than men. If a baby doesn’t get enough calcium through the placenta, then it takes it…out of the mother’s bone.” (Roberto et al 2001 [ | |
| “I am afraid of diagnosis of the disease as I know I can’t do much about it.” (Baheiraei et al 2006 [ | |
| “I’m too old I think…I think whatever happened has happened to my body now. I don’t think taking something is going to help it that much.” (Mazor et al 2010 [ | |
| | “I think anyone who would have fallen like that would have fractured. It was a hard fall. I am not able to see all that well so I think this is why I fell over.” (Besser et al 2012 [ |
| “I broke a bone because I fell. Anyone who falls can break a bone.” (Edwards et al 2006 [ | |
| “My bones seem to be pretty good. I’ve fallen a few times and I’ve never broken a bone. I’ve never broken anything.” (Mazor et al 2010 [ | |
| “I really don’t think I will [develop osteoporosis], because it is really not in my family at all. I’ve never broken a bone in my life.” (Burgener et al 2005 [ | |
| | “ The best thing I can do for other people is to take care of myself so I’m not a burden on them, and I think that’s hard…..it was very hard, I mean extremely hard for someone to give me a bath. That was very hard” Roberto et al 2001[ |
| “This disease is very important because it comes to you when you’re very old, weak and alone…. I am concerned about becoming frail…I don’t want to rely on others.” (Baheiraei et al 2006 [ | |
| | “I behave exactly as usual except that when I make my bed for example, or I have to do something or other, then I have to, just like that, ‘oh, your back, now you must just watch out, you know.’ So it’s there at the back of my mind.” (Reventlow et al 2007 [ |
| “I see people that have it and the way they’re bent way over due to the back problem and they are in a lot of pain and it’s kind of scary. I visualize myself in 5 years, is that going to be me?” Mazor et al 2010 [ | |
| “…Now I have back pain, you wonder if you’ve got that crap and whether you were stupid not to get scanned.” (Rothman et al 2014 [ | |
| | “I’d read the leaflet about the oesophagus, and a friend…had just died with having cancer of the oesophagus. And it was pretty awful evidently, so I thought, I don’t fancy that…. It probably doesn’t happen to many people, but once you start getting any sort of side effects, you think, oh maybe it’s doing it to me.” (Besser et al 2012 [ |
| “I’d rather risk a fall, which could happen tomorrow or it could happen when I’m 80, rather than take something daily that has high risks of side effects.” (Mazor et al 2010 [ | |
| “The thing I don’t like about [the medication] is when I get up in the morning, give me that coffee now! And I wait and I’m drinking the water and I’m watching the clock and I’m waiting and I just don’t like that.” (Lau et al 2008 [ | |
| “It doesn’t affect me at all, I have no symptoms. The only way it affects me is that I have to take medication.” (Besser et al 2012 [ | |
| “I’ve always been healthy, and I’ve never had to take medication, so having to take medication is like reaffirming you’re getting older and there’s a psychological aspect to that.” (Lau et al 2008 [ | |
| “They (the PCPs) don’t tell you much. It’s printed on your prescription. It’s always printed there and you should be aware of it.” (Iversen et al 2011 [ | |
| “It’s not been seen as a high status disease, so it’s never been given any priority for that reason. And it’s been a women’s disease, you know. So, the menfolk who sit on the money bags….” (Skolbekken et al 2008 [ | |
| “We must have more information about this disease. They give us different options and leave it to us to decide, and when we ask which one is better they tell us it is up to you. How it’s up to us then we don’t know…they don’t care.” (Baheiraei et al 2006 [ | |
| “Nobody’s ever said to me, if you did this or did that, or ate this or ate that, nobody’s ever given me a diet sheet connected with it, so presumably the powers that be don’t believe diet has anything to do with it because nobody’s ever given me anything to say do this.” (Besser et al 2012 [ | |
Fig 3Relationships between the main themes.
Issues brought up by specific population subgroups.
| Category | No. of studies | Quotations |
|---|---|---|
| 2 [ | Misconception: Men perceive osteoporosis as a female disease. | |
| “What’s wrong with you that you have that? Only women get that…it is embarrassing.” (Solimeo et al 2001 [ | ||
| “…It is like I am walking around telling people that I am suffering from a female disease….” (Nielsen et al 2011 [ | ||
| “You feel kind of odd when you get diagnosed with osteoporosis. You feel like you want to be quiet about it…. You don’t want to tell anybody about it.” (Nielsen et al 2011 [ | ||
| 15 [ | Misconception: Some participants did not believe osteoporosis was asymptomatic. | |
| “I know they say osteoporosis is painless, I can’t really believe that.” (Besser et al 2012 [ | ||
| 3 [ | Misconception: Some participants did not consider themselves at risk or showed little interest. | |
| “…I mean you’re receptive to what the information is that you want to know and if I’m not into osteoporosis then….” (Backett-Milburn et al 2000 [ | ||
| 3 [ | Misconception: Some participants did not consider themselves at risk and showed little interest. | |
| “I’m really ill-read on that kind of, you know, my life’s so busy, I hear all these things swanning round the office and I think ‘what’s all this about’ and it hasn’t, you know I’m not into it yet so I’m not really taking time to find out about it….” (Backett-Milburn et al 2000 [ | ||
| 11 [ | Concern: Participants were worried about the future. | |
| “I know old age takes its toll but osteoporosis does hold you back. It makes a difference to the future and the things you can do.” (Quantock et al 1997 [ | ||
| “I am scared of breaking into pieces if I fall, or jump.” (Reventlow et al 2006 [ |