Article

Perceptions and experiences of control among people living with motor neurone disease: a systematic review and thematic synthesis

Details

Citation

Glennie N, Harris FM & France EF (2022) Perceptions and experiences of control among people living with motor neurone disease: a systematic review and thematic synthesis. Disability and Rehabilitation. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2022.2104942

Abstract
Purpose: Current research suggests that feeling a lack of control is common among people living with Motor Neurone Disease (plwMND). This systematic review explores and synthesises evidence about: (1) What factors contribute towards perceptions of control in plwMND (2) How do plwMND attempt to maintain control in their daily lives? Methods: A systematic search from inception to January 2022 for peer-reviewed journal articles in English reporting qualitative and mixed-method primary studies or reviews of plwMND’s perceptions or experiences of control was conducted on CINAHL, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, ASSIA, Embase and AMED. Eligible articles underwent quality appraisal, data extraction and a thematic synthesis was carried out. Results: Twenty publications, 19 primary studies and one review, from nine countries, reporting the views of 578 participants aged from 20 to 90 years were included. Two key analytical themes were identified (1) diagnosis can lead to a disruption of previously held control beliefs (2) plwMND use a range of control strategies to attempt to retain control in their lives. Conclusion: This is the first systematic review and qualitative evidence synthesis to reveal the strategies plwMND use to regain control and that control beliefs about health, fate, identity and bodily control are significantly altered by the diagnosis.

Keywords
Rehabilitation; Motor Neurone Disease; Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; qualitative; review; quality of life; patient experience

Notes
Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Online

Journal
Disability and Rehabilitation

StatusIn Press
Publication date online01/08/2022
Date accepted by journal17/07/2022
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34573
PublisherInforma UK Limited
ISSN0963-8288
eISSN1464-5165

People (2)

Professor Emma France

Professor Emma France

Professor, Health Sciences Stirling

Mrs Nicola Glennie

Mrs Nicola Glennie

PhD Researcher, Health Sciences Stirling