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O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma

INTRODUCTION: Narcolepsy is a rare neurological sleep disorder with a substantial adverse impact on health-related quality of life and psychological well-being. Few studies have qualitatively explored how persons with narcolepsy perceive their symptoms and illness experience. Understanding how those...

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Autores principales: Schokman, A, Cheung, J, Milton, A, Naehrig, D, Thornton, N, Bin, Y, Kairaitis, K, Glozier, N
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591765/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.066
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author Schokman, A
Cheung, J
Milton, A
Naehrig, D
Thornton, N
Bin, Y
Kairaitis, K
Glozier, N
author_facet Schokman, A
Cheung, J
Milton, A
Naehrig, D
Thornton, N
Bin, Y
Kairaitis, K
Glozier, N
author_sort Schokman, A
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Narcolepsy is a rare neurological sleep disorder with a substantial adverse impact on health-related quality of life and psychological well-being. Few studies have qualitatively explored how persons with narcolepsy perceive their symptoms and illness experience. Understanding how those with narcolepsy conceptualise and communicate their experience is important if we are to identify/meet their healthcare needs. METHOD: 127 self-reported persons with narcolepsy were recruited from an Australian support group. Saturation was reached after 24, 1hr semi-structured interviews (mean age=33 (SD11), 44% reporting cataplexy). A multidisciplinary team of researchers/clinicians analysed interview transcripts using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Several key findings include: 1. participants identified fatigue, sleepiness, and two separate experiences of 'falling asleep/sleep attacks' as distinct symptoms often grouped as excessive daytime sleepiness. 2. Participants attributed their own meaning to commonly used medical terminology that differed from the literature (e.g. describing a sleep attack but calling it cataplexy). 3. ‘well-managed’ narcolepsy was determined by the level of functional impairment rather than symptom frequency. 4. Almost all participants experienced frequent anticipated and internalised- or self-stigma, likely stemming from societal devaluation of sleep and conflation of sleepiness with laziness. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest a needed shift in narcolepsy management that focuses on functional impairment, rather than just symptom treatment. They also highlight the need for clarification around common narcolepsy terms, as patients/physicians may use the same terminology to try and communicate different concepts. Having identified the type of stigmas experienced, future research is needed to explore if stigma-reduction reduces psychological comorbidity in narcolepsy.
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spelling pubmed-105917652023-10-24 O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma Schokman, A Cheung, J Milton, A Naehrig, D Thornton, N Bin, Y Kairaitis, K Glozier, N Sleep Adv Oral Presentations INTRODUCTION: Narcolepsy is a rare neurological sleep disorder with a substantial adverse impact on health-related quality of life and psychological well-being. Few studies have qualitatively explored how persons with narcolepsy perceive their symptoms and illness experience. Understanding how those with narcolepsy conceptualise and communicate their experience is important if we are to identify/meet their healthcare needs. METHOD: 127 self-reported persons with narcolepsy were recruited from an Australian support group. Saturation was reached after 24, 1hr semi-structured interviews (mean age=33 (SD11), 44% reporting cataplexy). A multidisciplinary team of researchers/clinicians analysed interview transcripts using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Several key findings include: 1. participants identified fatigue, sleepiness, and two separate experiences of 'falling asleep/sleep attacks' as distinct symptoms often grouped as excessive daytime sleepiness. 2. Participants attributed their own meaning to commonly used medical terminology that differed from the literature (e.g. describing a sleep attack but calling it cataplexy). 3. ‘well-managed’ narcolepsy was determined by the level of functional impairment rather than symptom frequency. 4. Almost all participants experienced frequent anticipated and internalised- or self-stigma, likely stemming from societal devaluation of sleep and conflation of sleepiness with laziness. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest a needed shift in narcolepsy management that focuses on functional impairment, rather than just symptom treatment. They also highlight the need for clarification around common narcolepsy terms, as patients/physicians may use the same terminology to try and communicate different concepts. Having identified the type of stigmas experienced, future research is needed to explore if stigma-reduction reduces psychological comorbidity in narcolepsy. Oxford University Press 2023-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10591765/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.066 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Sleep Research Society. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Oral Presentations
Schokman, A
Cheung, J
Milton, A
Naehrig, D
Thornton, N
Bin, Y
Kairaitis, K
Glozier, N
O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title_full O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title_fullStr O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title_full_unstemmed O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title_short O066 The Lived Experience of Narcolepsy - From Symptoms to Stigma
title_sort o066 the lived experience of narcolepsy - from symptoms to stigma
topic Oral Presentations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10591765/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleepadvances/zpad035.066
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