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Personal Understandings (personal + understanding)
Selected AbstractsPersonal understandings of illness among people with type 2 diabetesJOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Issue 2 2004Åsa Hörnsten MSc RN Background., Professionals and patients understand the experience of illness from different worlds. Professionals' explanatory models focus on aetiology, diagnosis, pathophysiology and treatment, while patients' explanatory models are more focused on consequences and influences on daily life. The differences between patients and professionals in their understanding often result in conflicting expectations about treatment, priorities and outcomes of care. Aim., The aim of this study was to describe personal understandings of illness among people with type 2 diabetes in Sweden. Method., A sample of 44 patients, 47,80 years, diagnosed with type 2 diabetes within the last 2 years, was recruited from four health care centres. Narrative thematic interviews were used covering the areas of developing, coping with and living with diabetes. Qualitative content analysis was performed. Findings., The findings were formulated into six categories: image of the disease, meaning of the diagnosis, integration of the illness, space for the illness, responsibility for care and future prospects. Conclusions., The findings demonstrate that patients' personal understanding of illness is an important complement to the traditional professional view of diabetes. They could serve as a foundation for development of health history interviewing, as well as development of systems of documentation. Patients' personal understandings of diabetes in their daily lives are considered to be an important shared source of information for planning meaningful care. [source] Vulvar Pain: A Phenomenological Study of Couples in Search of Effective Diagnosis and TreatmentFAMILY PROCESS, Issue 2 2008JENNIFER J. CONNOR PH.D. Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS), a vulvar pain disorder, continues to puzzle medical and mental health professionals due to its unknown etiology and lack of effective treatment. This study used transcendental phenomenology methodology to explore the experiences of couples in which the woman has a diagnosis of VVS. Sixteen in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with 13 heterosexual couples and 3 women. Four essences emerged: (1) In search of, the medical journey required extensive searching for knowledgeable and respectful practitioners to provide treatment. (2) The process of developing a personal understanding of this disorder led many couples to question their role in causing and maintaining VVS. (3) Developing strategies for coping with painful intercourse led to three strategies: becoming non-sexual, using alternatives to vaginal sex, and altering or enduring painful intercourse. (4) Feelings of isolation were experienced as adapting to this chronic pain syndrome was often a lonely process. Clinical suggestions included: treating the couple, not just the woman with VVS; encouraging couples to broaden definitions about the importance and primacy of vaginal intercourse and suggest alternative sexual activities less likely to cause vulvar pain; developing shared meaning as a couple, and assisting couples in locating physicians and resources. Suggestions are relevant for couples with VVS and those with chronic health problems affecting sexual relationships. RESUMEN Dolor vulvar: estudio fenomenológico de parejas que buscan un diagnóstico y tratamiento efectivos El síndrome de vestibulitis vulvar (svv), un trastono de dolor vulvar, continúa dejando perplejos a los profesionales de la salud física y mental debido a su etiología desconocida y a la inexistencia de un tratamiento efectivo. Este estudio utilizó metodología fenomenológica experimental para explorar las experiencias de parejas en que a la mujer se le ha diagnosticado el svv. Se llevaron a cabo dieciséis entrevistas (en profundidad y semiestructuradas) con 13 parejas heterosexuales y 3 mujeres, de las que se obtuvieron cuatro conclusiones esenciales: (1) En busca de , la investigación médica requería una búsqueda más exhaustiva de médicos eruditos y respetuosos que aportasen un tratamiento. (2) El proceso de desarrollar una comprensión personal del trastorno condujo a varias parejas a plantearse su papel en la causa y la prolongación del svv. (3) Desarrollar estrategias para afrontar un coito doloroso condujo a tres estrategias: prescindir del sexo, optar por alternativas al sexo vaginal y modificar o soportar el coito doloroso. (4) Se experimentaron sensaciones de aislamiento, pues el proceso de adaptación a este síndrome de dolor crónico resultó, a menudo, un proceso solitario. Entre los consejos clínicos se incluyen tratar a la pareja, y no sólo a la mujer con svv; animar a las parejas a ampliar las definiciones de la importancia y preferencia por el coito vaginal, así como sugerir actividades sexuales con menor riesgo de causar dolor vulvar; desarrollar un significado común como pareja; y ayudar a las parejas a encontrar médicos y recursos. Palabras clave: síndrome de vestibulitis vulvar; dolor vulvar; terapia de pareja. [source] Personal understandings of illness among people with type 2 diabetesJOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Issue 2 2004Åsa Hörnsten MSc RN Background., Professionals and patients understand the experience of illness from different worlds. Professionals' explanatory models focus on aetiology, diagnosis, pathophysiology and treatment, while patients' explanatory models are more focused on consequences and influences on daily life. The differences between patients and professionals in their understanding often result in conflicting expectations about treatment, priorities and outcomes of care. Aim., The aim of this study was to describe personal understandings of illness among people with type 2 diabetes in Sweden. Method., A sample of 44 patients, 47,80 years, diagnosed with type 2 diabetes within the last 2 years, was recruited from four health care centres. Narrative thematic interviews were used covering the areas of developing, coping with and living with diabetes. Qualitative content analysis was performed. Findings., The findings were formulated into six categories: image of the disease, meaning of the diagnosis, integration of the illness, space for the illness, responsibility for care and future prospects. Conclusions., The findings demonstrate that patients' personal understanding of illness is an important complement to the traditional professional view of diabetes. They could serve as a foundation for development of health history interviewing, as well as development of systems of documentation. Patients' personal understandings of diabetes in their daily lives are considered to be an important shared source of information for planning meaningful care. [source] Evidence-based practice: implications and concernsJOURNAL OF NURSING MANAGEMENT, Issue 4 2008BEd (Hons), PETER NOLAN BA (Hons) Aims, The aim of this paper was to undertake a brief critical appraisal of evidence-based practice (EBP) as it is currently perceived in health care settings. Background, The past two decades have seen EBP become increasingly important in health care planning, clinical thinking, and choice of treatments. It is based on scientific rationalism and adherents claim that decisions based on EBP are superior to those based on other approaches to care. Concerns are now being expressed that positivistic approaches to health care fail to take into account people's preferences, their internal resources and their personal understandings of health and wellbeing. It has been argued that there may be multiple types of evidence, all of which have a part to play in the formulation and execution of health care. Methods, After a literature search, this paper argues that whereas EBP may be useful in treating conditions that have a biological cause, it may be less helpful in understanding and treating conditions that have their origins in the social, psychological or spiritual domains. Results, The nature, strengths and limitations of evidence-based practice is discussed in this paper. Nurses are encouraged to develop the critical skills of evaluating EBP in the lives and experiences of the people they care for. Conclusions, Evidence-based practice has a part to play in improving the treatment provided for patients. Nonetheless, nurses should be aware of other kinds of evidence, and appreciate that any single approach to determining care, no matter how popular, is likely to lead to a service that does not truly meet the complex individual needs of patients. Implications for nursing management, In order for evidence-based practice to be safe, the nursing workforce must be able to evaluate the strength and relevance of research findings, and be able to understand that there are different kinds of evidence which should be called upon in order to respond sensitively and appropriately to the preferences of patients. A responsive workforce embraces multiple ways of thinking, respects different paradigms of care, and is able to respond to and respect the forms of care people value and seek. [source] |