患有慢性疾病的年轻人:披露策略和同伴的理解。

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION Disability and Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2024-09-11 DOI:10.1080/09638288.2024.2400598
Uwe Flick,Gundula Röhnsch
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的许多患有慢性疾病的年轻人害怕被同龄人视为异类,害怕被排斥在社交活动之外。这迫使他们考虑是公开还是隐瞒自己的病情。这篇文章分析了年轻人的披露策略,并将其与同龄人对疾病的理解联系起来。材料和方法这项探索性研究基于对 60 名患有慢性疾病(1 型糖尿病、癌症、慢性炎症性肠病或一种罕见疾病)的年轻人和 30 名同龄人的偶发访谈。对访谈进行了主题编码。我们发现了三类年轻人:1)通常会向同伴公开自己的病情及其主观意义;2)会与特定的同伴分享与健康有关的特定信息;3)避免主动公开病情,并且不确定在病情明显时如何谈论自己的病情。我们的研究结果还表明,同龄人对疾病认识的复杂程度以及他们赋予慢性病生活的意义各不相同。
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Young adults living with chronic illness: disclosure strategies and peers' understanding.
PURPOSE Many young adults living with chronic illness fear being perceived as different by their peers and excluded from social activities. This forces them to consider whether to disclose or conceal their illness. This article analyses young adults' disclosure strategies and links them to peers' understanding of illness. MATERIALS AND METHODS The explorative study is based on episodic interviews with sixty young adults living with chronic illnesses (type 1 diabetes, cancer, chronic inflammatory bowel disease or a rare disease) and thirty peers. The interviews were thematically coded. The young adults' statements were compared to the peer perspectives on a case-by-case basis. RESULTS We identified three groups of young adults: 1) those who are generally open with peers about their illness and its subjective meaning; 2) those who share selected health-related information's with selected peers; 3) those who refrain from active disclosure and are unsure how they might talk about their illness when it becomes apparent. Our findings also indicate that peers differ in the sophistication of their illness perceptions and the meaning they ascribe to living with a chronic illness. CONCLUSION Trainings should target both young adults and peers, and should assist both sides in talking about (serious) chronic illness.
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来源期刊
Disability and Rehabilitation
Disability and Rehabilitation 医学-康复医学
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
9.10%
发文量
415
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Disability and Rehabilitation along with Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology are international multidisciplinary journals which seek to encourage a better understanding of all aspects of disability and to promote rehabilitation science, practice and policy aspects of the rehabilitation process.
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