Self-management perceptions and experiences of patients with hard-to-heal wounds: a qualitative study.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q3 DERMATOLOGY
Lu Zhang, Lan Gu, Lin-Zhu Wu, Xue-Hua Zhao, Xun Wang, Yi Chen
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Abstract

Objective: This study explored the perceptions, psychological changes and needs for home self-management in people with hard-to-heal wounds.

Method: Participants were recruited from a wound care outpatient clinic of The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University, China, and qualitative, semi-structured interviews were conducted. A phenomenological approach of qualitative research was used, and the data were collected and analysed using Colaizzi's method.

Results: The research cohort comprised 15 patients and three themes were extracted: (1) symptom management burden (symptom distress and lack of knowledge about wound care); (2) inadequate resources related to self-management (insufficient medical resources in primary hospitals, tortuosity of the treatment-seeking process, expectation of access to wound expertise); and (3) self-managing pressures coexisting with motivation (high expectations for and low level of attention to wound healing, varied treatment adherence, financial burden, negative emotions, the contradiction between work and rest, and social communication impact).

Conclusion: There was variation in the perception of self-management among patients with hard-to-heal wounds, with only some patients knowing how to perform wound self-management at home. Overall, patients with hard-to-heal wounds had poor perceptions of self-management. Healthcare workers should encourage and guide patients with hard-to-heal wounds to self-manage, which will help to increase the patient's motivation for self-management and reduce the burden of symptom management. Professional staff in community and secondary hospitals should be trained to improve their guidance skills for self-management for patients with hard-to-heal wounds.

难以愈合伤口患者的自我管理认知和经验:一项定性研究。
目的:探讨创伤难愈者对家庭自我管理的认知、心理变化及需求。方法:从中国东吴大学第一附属医院伤口护理门诊招募参与者,进行定性半结构化访谈。采用质性研究的现象学方法,并采用Colaizzi的方法收集和分析数据。结果:研究队列包括15例患者,提取了三个主题:(1)症状管理负担(症状困扰和缺乏伤口护理知识);(2)与自我管理相关的资源不足(基层医院医疗资源不足,求诊过程繁琐,期望获得伤口专业知识);(3)自我管理压力与动机并存(对伤口愈合的高期望和低关注、治疗依从性差异、经济负担、负面情绪、工作与休息矛盾、社会沟通影响)。结论:难愈合患者对伤口自我管理的认知存在差异,仅有部分患者知道如何在家中进行伤口自我管理。总体而言,伤口难以愈合的患者自我管理能力较差。医护人员应鼓励和引导难以愈合的伤口患者进行自我管理,这有助于增加患者自我管理的动力,减轻症状管理的负担。对社区和二级医院的专业人员进行培训,提高他们对难以愈合的伤口患者自我管理的指导技能。
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来源期刊
Journal of wound care
Journal of wound care DERMATOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
10.50%
发文量
215
期刊介绍: Journal of Wound Care (JWC) is the definitive wound-care journal and the leading source of up-to-date research and clinical information on everything related to tissue viability. The journal was first launched in 1992 and aimed at catering to the needs of the multidisciplinary team. Published monthly, the journal’s international audience includes nurses, doctors and researchers specialising in wound management and tissue viability, as well as generalists wishing to enhance their practice. In addition to cutting edge and state-of-the-art research and practice articles, JWC also covers topics related to wound-care management, education and novel therapies, as well as JWC cases supplements, a supplement dedicated solely to case reports and case series in wound care. All articles are rigorously peer-reviewed by a panel of international experts, comprised of clinicians, nurses and researchers. Specifically, JWC publishes: High quality evidence on all aspects of wound care, including leg ulcers, pressure ulcers, the diabetic foot, burns, surgical wounds, wound infection and more The latest developments and innovations in wound care through both preclinical and preliminary clinical trials of potential new treatments worldwide In-depth prospective studies of new treatment applications, as well as high-level research evidence on existing treatments Clinical case studies providing information on how to deal with complex wounds Comprehensive literature reviews on current concepts and practice, including cost-effectiveness Updates on the activities of wound care societies around the world.
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