Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses

Abstract Background Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes joint inflammation. It affects around 400,000 people in the UK and 1 million adults in the USA. Given the appropriate treatment, many can have relatively few symptoms. It is therefore important to understand what it is lik...

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Main Authors: Fran Toye, Kate Seers, Karen Louise Barker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-02-01
Series:BMC Rheumatology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41927-018-0049-0
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spelling doaj-7502d8a0241a48ed99e0621bfb0366832020-11-25T01:42:04ZengBMCBMC Rheumatology2520-10262019-02-013111310.1186/s41927-018-0049-0Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence synthesesFran Toye0Kate Seers1Karen Louise Barker2Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustWarwick Research in Nursing, Warwick Medical School, University of WarwickNuffield Orthopaedic Centre, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustAbstract Background Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes joint inflammation. It affects around 400,000 people in the UK and 1 million adults in the USA. Given the appropriate treatment, many can have relatively few symptoms. It is therefore important to understand what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis and gain insight into peoples’ decisions about utilising healthcare. The aims of this study were: (1) to bring together qualitative evidence syntheses that explore patients’ experience of living with rheumatoid arthritis and (2) develop a conceptual understanding of what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis. Methods We used the methods of mega-ethnography. The innovation of mega-ethnography is to use conceptual findings from qualitative evidence syntheses as primary data. We searched four bibliographic databases from inception until September 2018 to identify qualitative evidence syntheses that explored patients’ experience of rheumatoid arthritis. Results We identified 373 qualitative evidence syntheses, removed 179 duplicates and screened 194 full text studies. We identified 42 qualitative evidence syntheses that explored the experience of pain or arthritis and 9 of these explored the experience of rheumatoid arthritis. We abstracted ideas into 10 conceptual categories: (1) rheumatoid arthritis is in control of my body (2) rheumatoid arthritis alters reciprocity; (3) rheumatoid arthritis is an emotional challenge; (4) rheumatoid arthritis disrupts my present and future self; (5) the challenge of balancing personal and work life; (6) I am trying to make sense of what is happening; (7) rheumatoid arthritis is variable and unpredictable; (8) rheumatoid arthritis is invisible; (9) I need a positive experience of healthcare, and (10) I need to reframe the situation. We developed a conceptual model underpinned by living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis. Conclusions This is the second mega-ethnography, or synthesis of qualitative evidence syntheses using the methods of meta-ethnography. Future research should consider the proliferation of qualitative evidence synthesis in order to avoid duplication of research effort. Our model for rheumatoid arthritis has some important clinical implications that might be transferable to other musculoskeletal conditions.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41927-018-0049-0Qualitative researchQualitative evidence synthesisRheumatoid arthritisPatient experienceSystematic reviewMeta-ethnography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fran Toye
Kate Seers
Karen Louise Barker
spellingShingle Fran Toye
Kate Seers
Karen Louise Barker
Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
BMC Rheumatology
Qualitative research
Qualitative evidence synthesis
Rheumatoid arthritis
Patient experience
Systematic review
Meta-ethnography
author_facet Fran Toye
Kate Seers
Karen Louise Barker
author_sort Fran Toye
title Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
title_short Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
title_full Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
title_fullStr Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
title_full_unstemmed Living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
title_sort living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis - a mega-ethnography of nine qualitative evidence syntheses
publisher BMC
series BMC Rheumatology
issn 2520-1026
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Abstract Background Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease that causes joint inflammation. It affects around 400,000 people in the UK and 1 million adults in the USA. Given the appropriate treatment, many can have relatively few symptoms. It is therefore important to understand what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis and gain insight into peoples’ decisions about utilising healthcare. The aims of this study were: (1) to bring together qualitative evidence syntheses that explore patients’ experience of living with rheumatoid arthritis and (2) develop a conceptual understanding of what it is like to live with rheumatoid arthritis. Methods We used the methods of mega-ethnography. The innovation of mega-ethnography is to use conceptual findings from qualitative evidence syntheses as primary data. We searched four bibliographic databases from inception until September 2018 to identify qualitative evidence syntheses that explored patients’ experience of rheumatoid arthritis. Results We identified 373 qualitative evidence syntheses, removed 179 duplicates and screened 194 full text studies. We identified 42 qualitative evidence syntheses that explored the experience of pain or arthritis and 9 of these explored the experience of rheumatoid arthritis. We abstracted ideas into 10 conceptual categories: (1) rheumatoid arthritis is in control of my body (2) rheumatoid arthritis alters reciprocity; (3) rheumatoid arthritis is an emotional challenge; (4) rheumatoid arthritis disrupts my present and future self; (5) the challenge of balancing personal and work life; (6) I am trying to make sense of what is happening; (7) rheumatoid arthritis is variable and unpredictable; (8) rheumatoid arthritis is invisible; (9) I need a positive experience of healthcare, and (10) I need to reframe the situation. We developed a conceptual model underpinned by living life precariously with rheumatoid arthritis. Conclusions This is the second mega-ethnography, or synthesis of qualitative evidence syntheses using the methods of meta-ethnography. Future research should consider the proliferation of qualitative evidence synthesis in order to avoid duplication of research effort. Our model for rheumatoid arthritis has some important clinical implications that might be transferable to other musculoskeletal conditions.
topic Qualitative research
Qualitative evidence synthesis
Rheumatoid arthritis
Patient experience
Systematic review
Meta-ethnography
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41927-018-0049-0
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