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The patient experience of MSCC

This study explores the patient experience of SCC, including its wide range of challenges and the impact on their lives. It identifies the difficulties, concerns, and fears faced by patients, as well as the coping strategies they employ. The findings suggest that a lack of realism might be an effective way of coping with adversity. This study provides valuable insights for healthcare professionals in understanding and supporting patients with SCC.

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The patient experience of MSCC

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  1. The patient experience of MSCC Clare Warnock Practice development sister WPH

  2. Patient’s experiences of SCC • Wide range of challenges associated with SCC • Muscle weakness, loss of mobility, impaired skin sensation, pain, incontinence, sexual dysfunction • Sudden loss of independence • Awareness of poor prognosis and implications of a life limiting illness • Unlike spinal injury patients they have limited time and opportunity to adapt • What is it like to experience this?

  3. What is the patient’s perspective? • Limited research exploring the patients perspective • Study currently in progress at WPH • Two studies suggests some intriguing findings which resonate with our experiences • Interviews with patients at various time points following their diagnosis with SCC (Eva) • Interviews immediately post diagnosis and treatment (local study) • Identified some of the challenges patients experience • Provides insight into ways patients with SCC cope

  4. Difficulties described by patients • Patients expressed sorrow, frustration and regret about multiple losses • Their body had become unfamiliar and unpredictable • Previous taken for granted activities were no longer straightforward • Not being able to walk was a main concern • Loss of independence • Needing help for so many ADL’s • Not being able to do the things you used to do • Uncertainty about future mobility • Will it improve, how much will I be able to do

  5. Difficulties described by patients • Getting home • Will I get there/how will I manage • Practical adaptations that have to be made • Impact on family and family life • Needing support from outside agencies • what support is there, will I get it, what is the least amount I can get away with • Fears that others would treat them differently due to their cancer AND their disability

  6. Challenges faced • Having cancer and a poor prognosis • Changing roles and identity • Challenged by limited mobility and loss of independence • How will I cope with being in the house more (boredom, activities, what will I do with my time) • How much of previous life outside the home will I be able to continue (e.g. going out for meals, holidays, caravan, social club, pub, work)

  7. How did patients manage these concerns and fears? • For most patients with SCC there is no time to adapt to illness and disability • Little opportunity to develop a sense of identity which incorporates these factors • Patients acknowledged that MSCC required them to make practical plans to manage certain tasks • But they tried to do this in a way that didn’t threaten their sense of identity • Who they are, their hopes and expectations

  8. Strategies used by patients • Patients described how their lives had not intrinsically changed • “Inside” they were who they had always been • Emphasising their ability to manage by their resourcefulness and ability to solve problems • Revising expectations of what they felt was acceptable for their quality of life • E.g. initially a wheelchair was unacceptable to them but as it became evident they needed one to became seen as a positive way of getting around

  9. Strategies used by patients • Setting “safe” boundaries (Eva 2009) • Not putting themselves to the test • Not trying to do things that they knew might not be achieved • Limiting their exposure to challenging tasks or environments • Avoiding confronting how difficult plans might be to achieved in reality • Aiming for small realistic achievements • Hoping to be able to stand with a frame/to use the banana board

  10. Coping with challenges (local study) • Using the positive potential in uncertainty • They have said they don’t know if I will make any progress but that means that I might • Focusing on the immediate practical issues rather than worrying about the long term • e.g. Working through the practicalities of getting home/improving mobility • “The perspective sandwich” • Acknowledge the challenges faced while stating a potential positive • E.g. some improvement in mobility, • the action taken to help e.g. exercises, practice

  11. Strategies used by patients • Looking forward to specific events and making “plans” for achieving them • Some plans were achievable • E.g going shopping in town in the wheelchair • Some were plans that could not be achieved • Often these were simply statements of intent e.g. we are planning to go on holiday in the camper van next year • On one level it did not matter if the plans were realistic or achieved • there was enjoyment to be had from looking forward to something happening at some unspecified time in the future

  12. Implications for HCPs • The convention in healthcare is to encourage patients to accept reality • However, a degree of lack of realism might be an effective way of coping with adversity • What we think patients should want to achieve may not be the same as the patients perspective • Hope as expectation, hope as wish

  13. Hope and coping • What is hope? “a confident yet uncertain expectation of achieving a future good, which to the hoping person, is realistically possible and personally significant” • Relative to the individuals circumstances • Fluid and changing • Personally constructed • Not always necessarily achievable

  14. Thinking about hope(Wiles 2008) • Hope as expectation • Hope for an outcome to occur with the expectation that such an outcome is likely • Hope as want, wish or desire • Hope for an outcome where the likelihood of it happening is remote • Expectation and wish could be seen as two ends of a continuum • People move back and forth along the continuum • People can simultaneously have different types of hope in relation to a range of recovery outcomes

  15. The role of positive illusions in hope and coping • Many coping strategies are based on positive illusions rather than a realistic interpretation of events and the persons ability to control them • Is this how we approach life normally? • Consider the difference between hope as expectation and hope as wish • Think of the “to do” list • Should it be any different because a person has cancer? • Positive illusions may play an important role in coping • Might be more adaptive than realistic beliefs • Generate more active ways of coping

  16. Implications for HCPs • Difficulties if patient’s plans and their ability to achieve them clash • E.g. concrete plans made for the unachievable • Realistic plans aren’t made for everyday living • However, there are usually 2 levels of goals • overly optimistic/ impractical • feasible and grounded • Try not to contradict unrealistic goals • look out for and develop achievable goals • Patients can simultaneously hope for a cure and acknowledge the terminal nature of their illness • No need to force the truth unless there is a sound reason to do so

  17. Is it that simple? • In reality we all move back and forth between negative and positive • In our study we found a constant negotiation of these positions

  18. Conclusions • Patients with MSSC face enormous challenges • Sometimes they want to talk about their problems and concerns and express anger, frustration and sadness • Sometimes they want to focus on the positive • Sometimes this includes non-achievable goals and wishes • Important to listen to the patient and work with their strategies for coping • Taking our cues from them but ensuring their care plans meet their current and future needs

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