| Literature DB >> 35268484 |
Eldre Wiida Beukes1,2, Alyssa Jade Ulep3, Gerhard Andersson4,5, Vinaya Manchaiah2,6,7,8.
Abstract
Although chronic conditions could cause third-party disability for significant others (SOs), little is known regarding the impact of tinnitus on SO. This study aimed to identify the effects of tinnitus on SOs. SOs of individuals with tinnitus were invited to participate in this study. SOs completed three open-ended questions focusing on the effects of tinnitus. Individuals with tinnitus completed the Tinnitus Functional Index as a self-reported measure of tinnitus severity. A mixed-methods analysis approach was undertaken. Of the 156 SOs responding, 127 (85%) reported that tinnitus impacted them. The impact surrounded sound adjustments, activity limitations, additional demands, emotional toll, and helplessness. Tinnitus negatively affected the relationship for 92 (58%) due to communication frustrations and growing apart. When asked if tinnitus had any positive effects, 64 (47%) SOs reported positive lifestyle adaptions, personal development, health awareness, and a changed outlook. There was no association between the level of tinnitus severity and SOs reporting that tinnitus had an impact on them individually, their relationships, or those reporting positive experiences. The study highlighted the third-party disability many SOs of individuals with tinnitus experience. The results indicate that SOs may benefit from a shared intervention to help mitigate the negative effects through a better understanding of tinnitus.Entities:
Keywords: intervention; positive experiences; significant others; third-party disability; tinnitus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35268484 PMCID: PMC8911454 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11051393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Demographic profile of the significant others.
| Characteristic | All Significant Others | Subgroups of Significant Others | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Significant Others Finding the Other Person’s Tinnitus Affects Them Personally ( | Significant Others Reporting the Other Person’s Tinnitus Affects Their Relationships ( | Significant Others Mentioning Positive Experiences from the Other Person’s Tinnitus ( | |
| Demographics | ||||
| Mean age (Standard deviation) (Range) | 55.96 (14.24) (18–84) | 55.66 (14.37) (18–84) | 55.61 (14.56) (19–84) | 55.47 (14.69) (22–84) |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 82 (53%) | 48 (38%) | 47 (50%) | 33 (52%) |
| Female | 74 (47%) | 79 (62%) | 48 (50%) | 31 (48%) |
| Relationship | ||||
| Partner | 131(84%) | 108 (85%) | 81 (85%) | 50 (78%) |
| Parent | 2 (1%) | 1 (1%) | 0 | 2 (3%) |
| Child | 11(7%) | 7 (6%) | 9 (10%) | 5 (8%) |
| Relative | 7 (5%) | 6 (5%) | 3 (3%) | 4 (6%) |
| Friend | 5 (3%) | 5 (4%) | 2 (2%) | 3 (5%) |
| Living together | ||||
| Yes | 135 (87%) | 111 (87%) | 82 (86%) | 49 (77%) |
| No | 20 (13%) | 16 (13%) | 13 (14%) | 15 (23%) |
| Presence of tinnitus | ||||
| Yes | 29 (19%) | 24 (19%) | 16 (17%) | 13 (20%) |
| No | 127 (81%) | 104 (81%) | 79 (83%) | 51 (80%) |
The association between significant others’ characteristics and those reporting that tinnitus affected them.
| Significant Others | Significant Others Finding the Other | Significant Others Reporting the Other Person’s Tinnitus Affects Their Relationships ( | Significant Others |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nature of the relationship | |||
| Living together | |||
| Significant other experiencing tinnitus | |||
| Level of tinnitus severity | |||
| Mean TFI score for individuals with tinnitus for each group | 57/100 (SD: 20) | 57/100 (SD: 21) | 57/100 (SD: 21) |
The impact of tinnitus on significant others.
| Category | Subcategory | Number of Meaning Units ( | Example of Meaning Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sound adjustments | Constant background sound | 10 | I tend to get angry because she always has to have something in the room creating background noise in order to sleep. |
| Television watching | 15 | He misses stuff even on full volume and we have to watch parts of a TV show over and over and over. | |
| Regulating sound | 16 | He complains when I play loud music. I have to keep the house quiet. I wear Bluetooth earphones to watch TV so as not to bother him. I have to keep my voice down. If you met me, you would know how hard that is! | |
| Exposure to loud sound | 10 | She keeps the TV so loud I can hear it across the house with the door closed. The volume of the truck radio is painfully loud. | |
| Activity limitations | Reducing social interactions | 16 | Our social life and time with our adult kids has been affected as well. When we are in a big family gathering, he will leave the room because he gets so anxious over the noise level. It is embarrassing. Or I go to the functions without him, which sucks. |
| Attending fewer events | 17 | Greatly reduced our going out to eat or large gatherings where there is a lot of noise. We can’t go to concerts, theaters and movies due to the volume. | |
| Needing to consider external circumstances | 11 | It has affected our times together. Mostly at night when it is at its worst. It has kept us from going outside when it seems to be worse in humidity or in certain weather. | |
| Listening less to music | 9 | We listen to less music together. He dislikes most music because he can’t hear words. Greatly has changed our enjoyment and love of music. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 104/238 (44%) | ||
| Demanding | Adjusting communication | 21 | For someone to not be able to hear when you talk to them unless you are right in front of them is frustrating. It can cause you to not say things that you otherwise would’ve. |
| More responsibility | 16 | I am shouldering more responsibility for our children and other duties. | |
| Being their ears | 12 | I am the one who is repeating back to him what he missed, and it can be very difficult to keep up, especially if you are watching a movie and also in conversation. | |
| Sleep restrictions | 5 | Constant sound together with sleep disruptions from my partner affects my daily life. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 54 (23%) | ||
| Emotional toll | Stress | 9 | I feel stressed out when she shows signs of depression or low mood. |
| Hurt | 5 | He gets anxious when the tinnitus is bad. He will be short with me and speak harshly. Hurts. I feel helpless. | |
| Frustration | 14 | Becoming frustrated with the continued complaints of tinnitus. I tend to lose patience, especially if I have to repeat myself multiple times. | |
| Annoyance | 17 | She complains about how it affects her. We can become annoyed at each other. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 45 (18%) | ||
| Helplessness | Unable to support | 8 | My wife sometimes starts crying for no apparent reason. She often complains about the sounds and I have no way of helping her. I feel powerless to help my wife and this is a burden I cannot handle very well. |
| Difficulty understanding | 14 | I find it hard to understand how difficult it is to live with this disease. In other words, it is impossible to feel what they are feeling. I do understand that it is a debilitating disease. | |
| Sadness about the change | 5 | It makes me feel very frustrated that I can’t help her and I’m sad that she is not the same person as before. | |
| Worry | 8 | I worry about her health and ability to cope with it. I worry about her not being able to read for very long since she is an avid reader. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 35 (15%) |
Figure 1The effect of tinnitus on significant others.
Tinnitus effects on the relationship between significant others and the individual with tinnitus.
| Category | Subcategory | Number of Meaning Units ( | Example of Meaning Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Relationship strengthened | More respect | 3 | A greater level of respect for how he handles the tinnitus. I have hyperacusis and don’t handle it very well a great deal of the time. |
| Brought us closer | 10 | We have in some ways grown closer because she does not like to be alone and relies on me more than before. | |
| Openness | 3 | He opens up about issues he is having | |
| Total number of meaning units | 16/282 (6%) | ||
| Communication difficulties | Limited | 19 | Believe me. I never know when I need to speak up for her to hear me or when I am speaking too loudly—until she lets me know in not always the gentlest fashion. This causes me to withdraw from trying to communicate. |
| Strained | 17 | Daily communication is a chore. Our communication has suffered a great deal because he can’t concentrate on conversation and keeps asking for things to be repeated. | |
| Frustrating | 19 | I’m always yelling and get frustrated having to repeat myself for him to hear and understand me. As I have to raise my voice which perceived that I am angry or upset. | |
| Misunderstandings | 25 | We have had many communication errors. I have told him something important that is misheard. It is not just the misunderstandings but also the emotional effect. It has me mistakenly think he is mad or disgusted with me when he is mad and disguised at it. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 80 (28%) | ||
| Growing apart | Less connected | 15 | I feel he shuts me out because he is scared and doesn’t want to scare me or look “weak.” I have walked on eggshells and am afraid to set him off. Our level of connection has diminished somewhat. |
| Effect of mood | 16 | I often feel like I have to “walk on eggshells” around her and be careful not to upset her. Because she is often on edge. She gets irritable more readily and overwhelmed easily. Mostly the low mood portion is what impacts our relationship | |
| Withdrawal | 8 | It has been tough to cope with the illness and the misery that my wife is going through. We have been limited in the activities that we use to do together before the tinnitus and she now tends to just want to be by herself. | |
| Worry | 6 | It has concerned both of us as to how we will face it in the future as we both know it will surely get worse. | |
| Total number of meaning units | 45/282 (16%) |
Figure 2The effects of tinnitus on relationships.
Positive experiences of tinnitus on significant others.
| Category | Subcategory | Number of Meaning Units ( | Example of Meaning Unit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle | Relaxing activities | 4 | I have spent more reflective time rather than just having noise going in the house with the TV etc. |
| New pastimes | 7 | I cook more at home. | |
| Slow down | 4 | When it’s bad we stop slow down do and work on it. | |
| 15/88 (17%) | |||
| Personal development | Empathy | 10 | I’ve learned to be more empathetic. |
| Patience | 15 | Taught me to be more patience and caring. | |
| Understanding | 13 | The only positive thing would be the awareness of tinnitus and how many people suffer with it. I am more aware of it and other people I come across who have it. | |
| 38/88 (44%) | |||
| Health awareness | Healthier lifestyle | 10 | Our eating habits have improved with hopes of relieving the symptoms of tinnitus. |
| Hearing loss awareness | 9 | I now wear earplugs at concerts. | |
| Investigations | 6 | It has led me to try to help do some research with him on possible remedies. We have had some positive discussions on what he should do when it seems really bad. | |
| 25/88 (28%) | |||
| Outlook | Gratefulness | 10/88 (11%) | I’m more gratitude for simple things. |
Figure 3Positive experiences of tinnitus on significant others.