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      A Qualitative Metasynthesis of the Experience of Fatigue Across Five Chronic Conditions

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          Abstract

          Context.

          Fatigue is a symptom reported by patients with a variety of chronic conditions. However, it is unclear whether fatigue is similar across conditions. Better understanding its nature could provide important clues regarding the mechanisms underlying fatigue and aid in developing more effective therapeutic interventions to decrease fatigue and improve quality of life.

          Objectives.

          To better understand the nature of fatigue, we performed a qualitative metasynthesis exploring patients’ experiences of fatigue across five chronic noninfectious conditions: heart failure, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic kidney disease, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

          Methods.

          We identified 34 qualitative studies written in the last 10 years describing fatigue in patients with one of the aforementioned conditions using three databases (Embase, PubMed, and CINAHL). Studies with patient quotes describing fatigue were synthesized, integrated, and interpreted.

          Results.

          Across conditions, patients consistently described fatigue as persistent overwhelming tiredness, severe lack of energy, and physical weakness that worsened over time. Four common themes emerged: running out of batteries, a bad life, associated symptoms (e.g., sleep disturbance, impaired cognition, and depression), and feeling misunderstood by others, with a fear of not being believed or being perceived negatively.

          Conclusion.

          In adults with heart failure, multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic kidney disease, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, we found that fatigue was characterized by severe energy depletion, which had negative impacts on patients’ lives and caused associated symptoms that exacerbated fatigue. Yet, fatigue is commonly misunderstood and inadequately acknowledged.

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          Most cited references41

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          Women's early warning symptoms of acute myocardial infarction.

          Data remain sparse on women's prodromal symptoms before acute myocardial infarction (AMI). This study describes prodromal and AMI symptoms in women. Participants were 515 women diagnosed with AMI from 5 sites. Using the McSweeney Acute and Prodromal Myocardial Infarction Symptom Survey, we surveyed them 4 to 6 months after discharge, asking about symptoms, comorbidities, and demographic characteristics. Women were predominantly white (93%), high school educated (54.8%), and older (mean age, 66+/-12), with 95% (n=489) reporting prodromal symptoms. The most frequent prodromal symptoms experienced more than 1 month before AMI were unusual fatigue (70.7%), sleep disturbance (47.8%), and shortness of breath (42.1%). Only 29.7% reported chest discomfort, a hallmark symptom in men. The most frequent acute symptoms were shortness of breath (57.9%), weakness (54.8%), and fatigue (42.9%). Acute chest pain was absent in 43%. Women had more acute (mean, 7.3+/-4.8; range, 0 to 29) than prodromal (mean, 5.71+/-4.36; range, 0 to 25) symptoms. The average prodromal score, symptom weighted by frequency and intensity, was 58.5+/-52.7, whereas the average acute score, symptom weighted by intensity, was 16.5+/-12.1. These 2 scores were correlated (r=0.61, P<0.001). Women with more prodromal symptoms experienced more acute symptoms. After controlling for risk factors, prodromal scores accounted for 33.2% of acute symptomatology. Most women have prodromal symptoms before AMI. It remains unknown whether prodromal symptoms are predictive of future events.
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            Toward a metasynthesis of qualitative findings on motherhood in HIV-positive women.

            A qualitative metasynthesis of qualitative findings ought to be more than a mere summary of those findings. Yet the processes by which the interpretive innovation expected of qualitative metasynthesis projects can be achieved remain opaque. Several analytic devices for the metasynthesis of findings were clarified in the course of an ongoing methodological project involving 45 reports of qualitative studies of HIV-positive women. These devices include the creation of a taxonomy of findings, the explicit use of sustained comparisons, the translation of in vivo concepts, and the use of imported concepts. Any qualitative metasynthesis of findings constitutes an interpretation at least three times removed from the lives represented in them. Clarifying the analytic devices used to create such metasyntheses is essential to demonstrating that despite being far away from participants' lives, these interpretations remain close to them. Copyright 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Res Nurs Health 26:153-170, 2003
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              Improving the process and outcome of care in COPD: development of a standardised assessment tool.

              A major goal of COPD treatment is to reduce symptom burden and ensure that the patient's health is as good as possible. This goal requires regular systematic assessment of the patient's COPD with clear and efficient communication between the patient and clinician. To explore patient and physician descriptions of COPD attributes, in order to inform content development of a patient-reported clinical assessment tool. Qualitative research methods (one-to-one interviews and patient focus groups) were used to elicit key characteristics to evaluate COPD health status and explore how patients with COPD experience their condition. ATLAS.ti version 5.0 was used to identify major themes and generate an item pool. Fifty-eight patients with COPD (GOLD stages 1-4; MRC grades 2-5) and 10 clinicians participated in this research. Twenty-one items were generated, capturing patient assessment of breathlessness, wheeze, cough, sleep, activity limitation, energy/fatigue, social function, and anxiety. This qualitative study identified a broad range of items that are potentially suitable for inclusion in a short, simple COPD assessment tool for use in routine clinical practice.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                8605836
                4849
                J Pain Symptom Manage
                J Pain Symptom Manage
                Journal of pain and symptom management
                0885-3924
                1873-6513
                28 March 2020
                20 December 2019
                June 2020
                01 June 2020
                : 59
                : 6
                : 1320-1343
                Affiliations
                National Institute of Nursing Research (R.B.J.-L.), NIH, Bethesda, Maryland; and School of Nursing (B.C.K., L.A.M., N.A.H., B.R.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Rosario B. Jaime-Lara, PhD, FNP, RN, Division of Intramural Research, Sensory Science and Metabolism Unit (SenSMet), Biobehavioral Branch, NINR, NIH, DHHS, 1 Cloister Court, Building 60, Room 258, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. rosario.jaime-lara@ 123456nih.gov
                Article
                NIHMS1579229
                10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.12.358
                7239763
                31866485
                671b28b7-1e4b-40b1-a4a7-d44e24c926e7

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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                Categories
                Article

                fatigue,chronic kidney disease,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,heart failure,multiple sclerosis,rheumatoid arthritis

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