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Illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease : A systematic review of qualitative studies

Striberger, Rebecka ; Axelsson, Malin ; Zarrouk, Moncef LU and Kumlien, Christine (2021) In International Journal of Nursing Studies 116.
Abstract

Background: Patients with chronic diseases create their own subjective beliefs about their conditions based on their illness perceptions. In the common-sense model, illness perceptions constitute personal beliefs about illness with regard to five components: identity, timeline, cause, control/cure, and consequences. Patients’ illness perceptions affect both their management of their disease and their adherence to treatment. Since patients with peripheral arterial disease need life-long treatment for secondary prevention, generating knowledge about illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease is essential. Objectives: To systematically review and synthesise the literature on illness perceptions in patients with... (More)

Background: Patients with chronic diseases create their own subjective beliefs about their conditions based on their illness perceptions. In the common-sense model, illness perceptions constitute personal beliefs about illness with regard to five components: identity, timeline, cause, control/cure, and consequences. Patients’ illness perceptions affect both their management of their disease and their adherence to treatment. Since patients with peripheral arterial disease need life-long treatment for secondary prevention, generating knowledge about illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease is essential. Objectives: To systematically review and synthesise the literature on illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease. Design: A systematic review Data sources: PubMed, CINAHL, and PsycINFO. Review methods: A systematic search strategy was conducted in December 2017, with an update in July 2019. Two team members independently screened all titles and abstracts. A relevance and quality appraisal of the studies was performed. The references from the included studies were evaluated for additional studies. The data from 14 studies were extracted and synthesised using a “best-fit” approach to framework analysis. A deductive analysis was conducted using the common-sense model. The data not suitable for the framework were analysed separately using inductive conventional content analysis, yielding an additional component representing the retrospective consequences of peripheral arterial disease. Findings: The findings showed diversity in illness perceptions in each of the five components of the framework as well as in the additional component. The findings showed participants’ lack of understanding of the chronic nature of the disease, i.e., about the timeline, the identity of the symptoms and the cause of the disease. The patients’ beliefs about control and cures varied from having high motivation to engage in physical activity to thinking that walking could make their situations worse. There was fear about the future, as patients perceived disease progression and decreasing control to be consequences of their illness. Living with the disease, the emphasis in the additional component, was a process for regaining control and adapting to their situations. Conclusions: Patients with peripheral arterial disease shape their own understandings of their conditions. These beliefs may influence their management of their disease and adherence to treatment. Therefore, the current study suggests that illness perceptions should be addressed when planning secondary prevention for patients with peripheral arterial disease.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Common-sense model, Illness perception, Peripheral arterial disease, Qualitative research
in
International Journal of Nursing Studies
volume
116
article number
103723
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:32826079
  • scopus:85089492963
ISSN
0020-7489
DOI
10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103723
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
dcb83f29-f18e-4e5d-9516-a607749af19e
date added to LUP
2020-08-28 08:23:54
date last changed
2024-09-19 04:59:54
@article{dcb83f29-f18e-4e5d-9516-a607749af19e,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Patients with chronic diseases create their own subjective beliefs about their conditions based on their illness perceptions. In the common-sense model, illness perceptions constitute personal beliefs about illness with regard to five components: identity, timeline, cause, control/cure, and consequences. Patients’ illness perceptions affect both their management of their disease and their adherence to treatment. Since patients with peripheral arterial disease need life-long treatment for secondary prevention, generating knowledge about illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease is essential. Objectives: To systematically review and synthesise the literature on illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease. Design: A systematic review Data sources: PubMed, CINAHL, and PsycINFO. Review methods: A systematic search strategy was conducted in December 2017, with an update in July 2019. Two team members independently screened all titles and abstracts. A relevance and quality appraisal of the studies was performed. The references from the included studies were evaluated for additional studies. The data from 14 studies were extracted and synthesised using a “best-fit” approach to framework analysis. A deductive analysis was conducted using the common-sense model. The data not suitable for the framework were analysed separately using inductive conventional content analysis, yielding an additional component representing the retrospective consequences of peripheral arterial disease. Findings: The findings showed diversity in illness perceptions in each of the five components of the framework as well as in the additional component. The findings showed participants’ lack of understanding of the chronic nature of the disease, i.e., about the timeline, the identity of the symptoms and the cause of the disease. The patients’ beliefs about control and cures varied from having high motivation to engage in physical activity to thinking that walking could make their situations worse. There was fear about the future, as patients perceived disease progression and decreasing control to be consequences of their illness. Living with the disease, the emphasis in the additional component, was a process for regaining control and adapting to their situations. Conclusions: Patients with peripheral arterial disease shape their own understandings of their conditions. These beliefs may influence their management of their disease and adherence to treatment. Therefore, the current study suggests that illness perceptions should be addressed when planning secondary prevention for patients with peripheral arterial disease.</p>}},
  author       = {{Striberger, Rebecka and Axelsson, Malin and Zarrouk, Moncef and Kumlien, Christine}},
  issn         = {{0020-7489}},
  keywords     = {{Common-sense model; Illness perception; Peripheral arterial disease; Qualitative research}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{International Journal of Nursing Studies}},
  title        = {{Illness perceptions in patients with peripheral arterial disease : A systematic review of qualitative studies}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103723}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2020.103723}},
  volume       = {{116}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}