Session 4 - Chronic Illness and Health Related QoL Flashcards

1
Q

How chronic illnesses usually onset?

A
  • Symptoms can be striking
  • More often they are slow in their onset
  • Other explanations for the symptoms are often available
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2
Q

What is biographical disruption?

A

Biographical disruption is a key sociological concept, identifying chronic illness as a major disruptive experience.

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3
Q

What is an illness narrative?

A

Much sociological research on chronic illness is based on people’s narratives of their illness. These narratives offer a way of making sense of the illness, and they perform certain functions.

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4
Q

What work goes into chronic illness? 5 things

A
  1. Illness work - symptom managment
  2. Everyday life work - managing daily life
  3. Emotional work - Managing emotions and those of others
  4. Biographical work - loss and reconstruction of self
  5. Identity work - Work to maintain an acceptable identity
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5
Q

Define stigma

A

A negatively defined condition, attribute, trait or behaviour conferring “deviant” status; a “spoiled” identity.

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6
Q

What is descreditable stigma?

A

The stigma is yet to be revealed. It may be kept secret, revealed intentionally by the patient or by some factor the patient cannot control

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7
Q

What is discredited stigma?

A

Physically visible characteristic or well-known stigma that sets patient apart

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8
Q

What is enacted stigma?

A

Discrimination has actually occurred

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9
Q

What is felt stigma?

A

Discrimination has not actually occurred, felt stigma is the fear of it

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10
Q

What is medical model of disability?

A
  • Disadvantages are a direct consequent of impairment and disabilities
  • Medical intervention needed to cure or help
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11
Q

What is the social model of disability?

A
  • Disability = A form of social oppression
  • Disadvantages are a product of environment and its failure to adjust
  • Political action and social change needed to help
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12
Q

According to ICIDH what is impairment?

A

Concerned with abnormalities in the structure of the functioning body

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13
Q

According to ICIDH what is disability?

A

Concerned with the performance of activities

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14
Q

According to ICIDH what is a handicap?

A

Concerned with broader social and psychological consequences of living with impairment and disability

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15
Q

Give 3 reasons to measure health

A
  • Target resources where they are most needed
  • monitor patients progress
  • Evaluate quality of health services
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16
Q

What are some forms of patient based outcomes?

A

Health related quality of life (HRQoL)

Patient reported outcome measures (PROM)

17
Q

What are patient based outcomes?

A

Attempts to assess well being from patient perspective

18
Q

What are the 2 main methods of measuring HRQoL? give examples of each. What are the pros and cons of each?

A

Qualitative (Non numerical data e.g. 1 on 1 discussion) and quantitative (numerical data which can include questionnaires)

Qualitative:

  • Pros - Good for initial looks at hrqol
  • Cons - resource hungry, not easy to use in evaluation

Quantitative:

  • Pros - easy to use in evaluation, less resource hungry
19
Q

Define reliability and validity,

A

Reliability - Same score each time?

Validity - Is instrument measuring what it shoud?

20
Q

What is the difference between a generic and specific instrument?

A

Generic - Can be used with any population (including healthy people), generally cover perceptions of overall health

Specific - Disease specific, site specific, dimension specific

21
Q

Give an example of a generic instrument and a specific instrument

A

Generic - SF-36

Specific - Oxford hip score

22
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of specific instruments?

A

Advantages:

  • very relevant content,
  • sensitive to change
  • acceptable to patients.

Disadvantages:

  • cannot be used with people who don’t have the disease,
  • comparison is limited
  • they may not detect unexpected effects.