| Literature DB >> 32375747 |
Diana H Ferreira1, Slavica Kochovska2, Aaron Honson3, Jane L Phillips2, David C Currow3,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic breathlessness is a recognized clinical syndrome that severely impacts patients and carers, who become increasingly restricted in their daily activities. Often, patients become reliant on their carers, who are required to provide constant support. Although individual experiences of breathlessness have been previously investigated, there are few studies exploring contemporaneous experiences of breathlessness of the patient and their carer. This study aimed to understand the experience of severe chronic breathlessness in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) from the perspective of the patient and carer unit.Entities:
Keywords: Carers; Chronic breathlessness; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; Patients; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32375747 PMCID: PMC7203967 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-020-00572-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1Diagram of patients and carers included
Patients (n = 9) and their carers (n = 9)
| Patient & carer ID number | Patient | Carer | Relationship with the patient |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | Male | Husband |
| 2 | Male | Female | Wife |
| 3 | Female | Male | Son |
| 4 | Male | Female | Wife |
| 5 | Male | Female | Wife |
| 6 | Male | Female | Wife |
| 7 | Male | Female | Wife |
| 8 | Female | Male | Husband |
| 9 | Male | Female | Wife |
Patients characteristics (n = 9)
| 77 (72–79) | |
| Female | 3 |
| Oceanian (Australia or New Zealand) | 8 |
| North-West European | 1 |
| English | 9 |
| Living in a private residence | 9 |
| Married or de facto | 8 |
| Widowed | 1 |
| Did not complete high school | 4 |
| Completed high school | 1 |
| Completed a trade certificate | 2 |
| University Degree | 2 |
| 3 | 9 |
| 4 | 1 |
| 6 | 2 |
| 7 | 3 |
| 8 | 2 |
| 9 | 1 |
| 50 | 3 |
| 60 | 3 |
| 70 | 3 |
mMRC 0–4 modified Medical Research Council scale (higher scores correspond to lower levels of exertion achieved before being limited by breathlessness), NRS 0 to 10 numerical rating scale (0 = no breathlessness, 10 worst possible breathlessness); AKPS Australia-modified Karnofsky Performance Status (higher scores correspond to better performance status)
Carer’s characteristics (n = 9)
| 70 (69–79) | |
| Female | 6 |
| Oceanian (Australia or New Zealand) | 6 |
| North-West European | 3 |
| Did not complete high school | 4 |
| Completed high school | 3 |
| University degree | 2 |
| Married or de facto | 9 |
| Yes | 8 |
| No | 1 |
| 45 (21–56) | |
| Yes | 7 |
| No | 2 |
| 4 (3–5) | |
| > 40 h | 7 |
| 20–40 h | 1 |
| 10–20 h | 1 |
| No | 9 |
| No | 9 |
Results of the matrix used for analysis
| Patients & Carers | Patient | Carer |
|---|---|---|
1. Breathlessness shrinks the physical and relational world available to patients and carers and increases the time they spend together | • Restriction of daily activities • Restriction of independence • Good days and bad days | • Restriction of their own daily activities • Describe patients have good days and bad days • Hard to disconnect from the carer’s role |
2. Patient and carers work individually and together to create optimal functioning for both | • Keep as active as possible • Try to avoid over-exertion • Some push to the limit | • Take over some tasks • Slow down • Step in to prevent perceived over-exertion |
3. Patient and carers have active and complementary roles in managing breathlessness | • Have an active role in managing breathlessness • Work with the carer to overcome breathlessness | • Have an active role in managing breathlessness • Degree of participation depends on patients’ limitations • Step in situations of acute breathlessness |
4. Emotional coping with breathlessness is difficult for patients, but harder for carers | • Annoyance • Frustration | • Frustration • Resentment • Feeling trapped • Giving up part of their identity |
5. Sense of meaning created by the relationship between patients and carers | • See death as natural (no fear) • Find meaning in their relationship with the carer | • Fear patients’ death and their future • Try to bring joy and happiness to the patient |