Objective:In Japan 100 new cases of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB) are diagnosed each year. During treatment patients must be hospitalized under isolation conditions. To describe their experience and feelings was the purpose of this study. Method:Five patients in two hospitals responded to semi-structured interviews in 2006. Interviews were audio-taped, transcribed verbatim and analyzed by qualitative description. Results:Participants were four men and a woman ranging in age from 45 to 76 years. Two were experiencing the initial onset of disease;the others were re-admissions. Their current admissions extended from 50 to 3036 days. All patients knew they had a disease that was “difficult to cure”; some believed they would “be cured,” but others were afraid that they “cannot be cured”; “whether they would survive to return home or not” was a concern. Most felt much stress because they “could not see future,” due to their disease and also the long-term hospitalization and isolation... “almost nothing about hospitalization is enjoyable.” Visits from family and friends, letters and emails, and conversations with nurses linked patients to others and the outside world. Conclusion:MDRTB patients sense the possibility of death. As patients respond to laboratory tests and treatments nurses help them “envision their possible futures.” Nurses are key connectors to outside worlds. Recognition of and support for such communications functions might help nurses sustain their burden of caring and thus patientsʼ endurance of the difficult conditions of their enforced hospitalization.
CITATION STYLE
Shimamura, T., Taguchi, A., Kobayashi, S., Nagata, S., Kushihara, Y., Nagata, Y., … Murashima, S. (2010). The Perceptions and Feelings of Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis Patients in Their Prolonged Hospital-life. Journal of Japan Academy of Nursing Science, 30(2), 3–12. https://doi.org/10.5630/jans.30.2_3
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