Patients' spontaneous discourse on the importance of significant others in the course of transplantation: A qualitative study


Autoria(s): Bridy C.; Ruffiner-Boner N.; Fasseur F.; Santiago M.; Pascual M.; Piot-Ziegler C.
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Background: This study explores significant ones' implication before and after transplantation. Methods: Longitudinal semi-structured interviews were conducted in 64 patients awaiting all-organ transplantation. Among them, 58 patients spontaneously discussed the importance of their significant other in their daily support. Discourse analysis was applied. Findings: During the pre-transplantation period renal patients reported that significant others took part in dialysis treatment and participated to regimen adherence. After transplantation, quality of life improved and the couple dynamics returned to normal. Patients awaiting lung or heart transplantation were more heavily impaired. Significant others had to take over abandoned roles. After transplantation resuming normal life became gradually possible, but after one year either transplantation health benefits relieved physical, emotional and social loads, or complications maintained the level of stress on significant others. Discussion: Patients reported that significant others had to take over various responsibilities and were concerned about long-term stress that should be adequately supported.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_2B19486F4226

isbn:0887-0446

isiid:000260047300141

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Joint BPS (British Psychological Society's) Division of Health Psychology/European Health Psychology Society Annual Conference 2008

Palavras-Chave #Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject

inproceedings