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A Matter of Taste? Quality of Life in Day-to-Day Living with ALS and a Feeding Tube.
Pols, Jeannette; Limburg, Sarah.
Affiliation
  • Pols J; Department of General Practice, Section of Medical Ethics, Academic Medical Centre, Postbus 22700, 1100 DE, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. a.j.pols@amc.uva.nl.
  • Limburg S; Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. a.j.pols@amc.uva.nl.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 40(3): 361-82, 2016 Sep.
Article de En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26547696
ABSTRACT
Although people often refer to quality of life and there is a respectable research tradition to establish it, the meaning of the term is unclear. In this article we qualitatively study an intervention of which the quantitative effects are documented as indecisive. We do this in order to learn more about what the meaning of the term quality of life means when it is studied in daily life. With the help of these findings we reflect on the intricacies of objectifying and measuring quality of life using quantitative research designs. Our case is the feeding tube for patients suffering from ALS, a severe motor neuron disease that rapidly and progressively incapacitates patients. We studied how these patients, who lived in the Netherlands, anticipated and lived with a feeding tube in the course of their physical deterioration. Our analysis shows that the quality of life related to the feeding tube has to be understood as a process rather than as an outcome. The feeding tube becomes a different thing as patients move through the various phases of their illness, due to changes in their condition, living circumstances, and concerns and values. There are very different appreciations of the way the feeding tube changes the body's appearance and feel. Some patients refuse it because they feel it disfigures their body, whereas others are indifferent to its appearance. Our conclusion is that these differences are difficult to grasp with a quantitative study designs because 'matters of taste' and values are not distributed in a population in the same ways as physiological responses to medication. Effect studies assume physiological responses to be more or less the same for everyone, with only gradual differences. Our analysis of quality in daily life, however, shows that what a treatment comes to be and how it is valued shows shows generalities for subgroups rather than populations.
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Texte intégral: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Qualité de vie / Nutrition entérale / Sclérose latérale amyotrophique Type d'étude: Observational_studies Aspects: Patient_preference Limites: Adult / Humans Pays/Région comme sujet: Europa Langue: En Journal: Cult Med Psychiatry Année: 2016 Type de document: Article Pays d'affiliation: Pays-Bas

Texte intégral: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Base de données: MEDLINE Sujet principal: Qualité de vie / Nutrition entérale / Sclérose latérale amyotrophique Type d'étude: Observational_studies Aspects: Patient_preference Limites: Adult / Humans Pays/Région comme sujet: Europa Langue: En Journal: Cult Med Psychiatry Année: 2016 Type de document: Article Pays d'affiliation: Pays-Bas