3.8 Article

Knowing the entire story - a focus group study on patient experiences with chronic Lyme-associated symptoms (chronic Lyme disease)

Journal

BMC PRIMARY CARE
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12875-022-01736-5

Keywords

Lyme disease; Chronic Lyme disease; Focus group; Patient perspective; Narrative analysis; Health communication

Funding

  1. European Regional Development Fund
  2. Interreg North Sea Region Programme 2014-2020 as part of the NorthTick project [38-2-7-19]

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This study combines medical and communication science approaches to assess the experiences of patients with chronic Lyme-associated symptoms (CLD) and their interactions with the healthcare system. The findings suggest that patients often feel misunderstood and neglected, and their symptoms significantly impact their daily lives. The study highlights the importance of improving doctor-patient communication and provides potential ways to address the issues faced by CLD patients.
Background Healthcare providers frequently struggle to provide effective care to patients with chronic Lyme-associated symptoms (chronic Lyme disease, CLD), potentially causing these patients to feel misunderstood or neglected by the healthcare system. This study is the first to use a combined medical and communication science approach, and aims to assess patients' experiences with CLD & CLD-related care, identify themes and repertories in these patients' narrations, and provide potential ways to improve communication with them. Methods Informed by the principles of 'clean language', we conducted focus groups with self-identified CLD patients (N = 15). We asked participants about their experiences with CLD and CLD-related healthcare. We performed thematic analyses using a bottom-up approach based in discourse analysis. We also sought to identify specific types of verbalizations (repertoires) across themes. Results Participants thematised a heterogeneous set of CLD-associated symptoms, which they frequently labelled as 'invisible' to others. Their illness significantly affected their daily lives, impacting their work, social activities, relationships with loved ones, hobbies and other means of participating in society. Negative experiences with healthcare providers were near-universal, also in patients with short-lived CLD-associated symptoms. Verbalizations were notable for frequent use of communicative modes that implicitly create common ground between participants and that give a certain validity to personal experiences (impersonal 'you' and other forms of presupposition). Conclusion Central themes found in CLD patients' communication are 1. the experience of significant symptoms, 2. for which adequate relief is only rarely found from conventional medical practitioners, and 3. that are largely invisible to the outside world. Verbalizing these themes, patients use various repertoires for their shared experiences, such as a feeling of abandonment or not being heard by the medical system, feelings of loss with respect to their previous health, and the idea that they might have been better off had they been diagnosed sooner. Working with these repertoires will enable healthcare providers to establish a shared perspective with their CLD patients, thus engaging in more fruitful doctor-patient communication. We hypothesize that these findings are not unique to CLD, but may also be applicable to other conditions with an uncertain aetiology, such as Long COVID.

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