Patient and family experience 2 years after necrotizing soft-tissue infection: A longitudinal qualitative investigation
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Patient and family experience 2 years after necrotizing soft-tissue infection : A longitudinal qualitative investigation. / Egerod, Ingrid; Knudsen, Vibeke E.; Andersson, Annette E.; Fagerdahl, Ann Mari.
I: Journal of Advanced Nursing, Bind 79, Nr. 8, 2023, s. 2924-2935.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Patient and family experience 2 years after necrotizing soft-tissue infection
T2 - A longitudinal qualitative investigation
AU - Egerod, Ingrid
AU - Knudsen, Vibeke E.
AU - Andersson, Annette E.
AU - Fagerdahl, Ann Mari
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Journal of Advanced Nursing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Aims: The study aims were to provide a comprehensive description of the short- and long-term experience of necrotizing soft-tissue infections from the patient and family perspective. Further, to describe how unmet needs related to diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation are experienced. And finally, to present patient and family recommendations for improvements. Design: The study had a longitudinal qualitative multi-centre two-country design. Methods: Qualitative content analysis was applied to 87 semi-structured interviews involving 50 participants from Denmark and Sweden. In most interviews, patient and family were interviewed separately. Data were collected in 2015–2018. This is the fifth and final paper reporting the study. Findings: After initial inductive coding, we constructed a matrix of four timepoints (pre-admission, acute admission, after 6 months and after 2 years) describing physical, psychological and social responses and recommendations for improvement. We analysed deductively according to timepoints and predefined categories describing patient and family responses to life with necrotizing soft-tissue infections. The study suggested that physical recovery was obtained before psychological recovery. The aftermath of job loss and lacking social services amplified the burden. Patients still recovering experienced lack of understanding from family, friends and professionals that failed to recognize the complexity of their suffering. Conclusions: Half of the patients in our study reported making a full recovery while the remaining described issues still unresolved 2 years after intensive care unit discharge. Predisposing factors and symptoms align with other studies of critical illness. During the acute stage, patients receive state-of-the art treatment and care, but as time passes, rehabilitation becomes less available and less patient-centred. Impact: The study will increase nurses' understanding of patient and family suffering and complexity of long-term survival of necrotizing soft-tissue infections. Patient or Public Contribution: From the planning stage of the study, we collaborated with a necrotizing soft-tissue infection survivor.
AB - Aims: The study aims were to provide a comprehensive description of the short- and long-term experience of necrotizing soft-tissue infections from the patient and family perspective. Further, to describe how unmet needs related to diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation are experienced. And finally, to present patient and family recommendations for improvements. Design: The study had a longitudinal qualitative multi-centre two-country design. Methods: Qualitative content analysis was applied to 87 semi-structured interviews involving 50 participants from Denmark and Sweden. In most interviews, patient and family were interviewed separately. Data were collected in 2015–2018. This is the fifth and final paper reporting the study. Findings: After initial inductive coding, we constructed a matrix of four timepoints (pre-admission, acute admission, after 6 months and after 2 years) describing physical, psychological and social responses and recommendations for improvement. We analysed deductively according to timepoints and predefined categories describing patient and family responses to life with necrotizing soft-tissue infections. The study suggested that physical recovery was obtained before psychological recovery. The aftermath of job loss and lacking social services amplified the burden. Patients still recovering experienced lack of understanding from family, friends and professionals that failed to recognize the complexity of their suffering. Conclusions: Half of the patients in our study reported making a full recovery while the remaining described issues still unresolved 2 years after intensive care unit discharge. Predisposing factors and symptoms align with other studies of critical illness. During the acute stage, patients receive state-of-the art treatment and care, but as time passes, rehabilitation becomes less available and less patient-centred. Impact: The study will increase nurses' understanding of patient and family suffering and complexity of long-term survival of necrotizing soft-tissue infections. Patient or Public Contribution: From the planning stage of the study, we collaborated with a necrotizing soft-tissue infection survivor.
KW - critical care
KW - illness burden
KW - necrotizing fasciitis
KW - nursing
KW - patient perspective
KW - qualitative research
U2 - 10.1111/jan.15535
DO - 10.1111/jan.15535
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 36541272
AN - SCOPUS:85144403995
VL - 79
SP - 2924
EP - 2935
JO - Journal of Advanced Nursing
JF - Journal of Advanced Nursing
SN - 0309-2402
IS - 8
ER -
ID: 340846259