Living With Spasticity During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study of Patient, Carer and Physician Experiences

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Health Expectations Pub Date : 2024-09-23 DOI:10.1111/hex.70032
Mohamed Sakel, Karen Saunders, Rafey Faruqui, Jamie Keene, David Wilkinson
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Abstract

Background

Approximately 4.4 million people in England (8% of the total population) are living with a long-term neurological condition. Within this group of vulnerable individuals, there will be individuals living with severe spasticity that requires regular outpatient treatment with botulinum toxin injection. The closure of outpatient spasticity services during the pandemic impacted individuals who required spasticity treatment and their carers, as well as the specialist clinicians responsible for service delivery.

Objectives

We aimed to gain insight into the experiences of individuals living with spasticity, their carers and a clinical spasticity service lead during the pandemic, and to reflect on potential learning for the future.

Methods

A qualitative study was designed using semi-structured interviews conducted by telephone. Participants comprised patients living with a long-term neurological condition who attended outpatient spasticity clinics before the start of the pandemic in England, primary carers who accompanied patients attending these clinics and a clinical spasticity service lead. Data were audio recorded, transcribed, anonymised and coded. Data analysis utilised the One Sheet of Paper thematic approach to identify themes, which were discussed and analysed by the interdisciplinary research team and two patient and carer participants.

Results

Out of the 11 participants recruited, aged 36–77 years, seven comprised people living with spasticity related to a long-term neurological condition, three were carers and one was a clinical spasticity service lead. Six participants were male and five were female. Among the participants, four were stroke survivors, two were living with spinal cord injury and one was living with multiple sclerosis. Analysis revealed six major themes: experience of living with spasticity during the pandemic; impact of the pandemic on patient, carer and clinician health; access to and experience of outpatient clinic appointments; coping strategies during the pandemic; system improvements; and learning from the pandemic period.

Conclusion

These findings contribute research knowledge to a very limited research knowledge base and suggest that there is scope for improving system and service delivery through the allocation of research funding to senior clinicians working in this specialist area.

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在 COVID-19 大流行期间与痉挛共存:关于患者、护理者和医生经历的定性研究。
背景:英格兰约有 440 万人(占总人口的 8%)长期患有神经系统疾病。在这群弱势人群中,有些人患有严重痉挛,需要定期接受肉毒杆菌毒素注射门诊治疗。大流行期间痉挛门诊服务的关闭对需要痉挛治疗的患者及其护理者以及负责提供服务的专科临床医生造成了影响:我们的目的是深入了解痉挛患者、其照护者和临床痉挛服务负责人在大流行期间的经历,并反思未来可能学到的东西:设计了一项定性研究,通过电话进行半结构化访谈。参与者包括在大流行开始前在英格兰痉挛门诊就诊的长期神经系统疾病患者、陪同患者就诊的初级护理人员以及临床痉挛服务负责人。对数据进行了录音、转录、匿名化和编码。数据分析采用 "一张纸 "主题分析法确定主题,由跨学科研究小组和两名患者及护理人员参与者对主题进行讨论和分析:在招募的 11 名年龄在 36-77 岁之间的参与者中,有 7 名是长期患有神经系统疾病的痉挛患者,3 名是照护者,1 名是临床痉挛服务负责人。六名参与者为男性,五名为女性。其中四人是中风幸存者,两人是脊髓损伤患者,一人是多发性硬化症患者。分析揭示了六大主题:大流行期间痉挛患者的生活体验;大流行对患者、护理者和临床医生健康的影响;门诊预约的获得和体验;大流行期间的应对策略;系统改进;以及从大流行期间学习:这些研究结果为非常有限的研究知识库提供了研究知识,并表明通过向从事该专业领域工作的资深临床医生分配研究资金,可以改善系统和服务的提供。
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来源期刊
Health Expectations
Health Expectations 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
9.40%
发文量
251
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Expectations promotes critical thinking and informed debate about all aspects of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in health and social care, health policy and health services research including: • Person-centred care and quality improvement • Patients'' participation in decisions about disease prevention and management • Public perceptions of health services • Citizen involvement in health care policy making and priority-setting • Methods for monitoring and evaluating participation • Empowerment and consumerism • Patients'' role in safety and quality • Patient and public role in health services research • Co-production (researchers working with patients and the public) of research, health care and policy Health Expectations is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research, review articles and critical commentaries. It includes papers which clarify concepts, develop theories, and critically analyse and evaluate specific policies and practices. The Journal provides an inter-disciplinary and international forum in which researchers (including PPIE researchers) from a range of backgrounds and expertise can present their work to other researchers, policy-makers, health care professionals, managers, patients and consumer advocates.
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