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‘When it goes back to my normal I suppose’: a qualitative study using online focus groups to explore perceptions of ‘control’ among people with eczema and parents of children with eczema in the UK

‘When it goes back to my normal I suppose’: a qualitative study using online focus groups to explore perceptions of ‘control’ among people with eczema and parents of children with eczema in the UK
‘When it goes back to my normal I suppose’: a qualitative study using online focus groups to explore perceptions of ‘control’ among people with eczema and parents of children with eczema in the UK
Objective: to inform the development of a core outcome set for eczema by engaging with people with eczema and parents of children with eczema to understand their experiences and understanding of the concept ‘eczema control’.

Design: 37 participants took part in a total of six semi-structured online focus groups held in a typed chatroom with 5–7 participants per group. Three groups involved adults with eczema and three groups involved parents of children with eczema. Framework analysis was used for data analysis.

Setting: community-based sample was recruited from across the UK via social media and email.

Participants: 19 adults aged 17–61 years (15/19 female, 16/19 white) and 18 parents of children with eczema aged 9 months–17 years (9/18 female, 18/19 white).

Results: four main themes were identified:(1) ‘Commonalities and differences in the experiences of control’: a reduction in symptoms such as itch and sleep loss characterised eczema control, but what level was acceptable differed across participants;(2) ‘Eczema control goes beyond the skin’: psychological factors, social factors, the constant scratching and the impact on everyday activities are a variety of ways an individual can be impacted;(3) ‘Stepping up and down of treatment’: participants’ stepped-up treatment in response to loss of control, but several factors complicated this behaviour. Control needed to be maintained after stepped-up treatment ended to be acceptable; and (4) ‘How to measure control’: self-report was generally preferred to allow frequent measurements and to capture unobservable features. Although most thought their eczema needed to be measured frequently, many also felt that this was not always realistic or desirable.

Conclusions: ‘Eczema control’ is a complex experience for people with eczema and parents of children with the condition. These experiences could have important implications on how long-term control should be measured in eczema clinical trials and clinical practice.
2044-6055
Howells, Laura
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Chalmers, Joanne
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Cowdell, Fiona
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Ratib, Sonia
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Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Thomas, Kim
9d3742f0-c4fc-4d43-9255-3f854ebf134d
Howells, Laura
4cbdc7f3-fc8e-4e74-b239-8fc6a78423d3
Chalmers, Joanne
c135c48d-5b38-4554-9d3e-e4b8242ac10a
Cowdell, Fiona
d97ffa1c-737c-4926-9271-1bd6f1c1dbaa
Ratib, Sonia
f46c76b3-f4f0-4ea8-9a7f-fb164447f604
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Thomas, Kim
9d3742f0-c4fc-4d43-9255-3f854ebf134d

Howells, Laura, Chalmers, Joanne, Cowdell, Fiona, Ratib, Sonia, Santer, Miriam and Thomas, Kim (2017) ‘When it goes back to my normal I suppose’: a qualitative study using online focus groups to explore perceptions of ‘control’ among people with eczema and parents of children with eczema in the UK. BMJ Open, 7, [e017731]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017731).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to inform the development of a core outcome set for eczema by engaging with people with eczema and parents of children with eczema to understand their experiences and understanding of the concept ‘eczema control’.

Design: 37 participants took part in a total of six semi-structured online focus groups held in a typed chatroom with 5–7 participants per group. Three groups involved adults with eczema and three groups involved parents of children with eczema. Framework analysis was used for data analysis.

Setting: community-based sample was recruited from across the UK via social media and email.

Participants: 19 adults aged 17–61 years (15/19 female, 16/19 white) and 18 parents of children with eczema aged 9 months–17 years (9/18 female, 18/19 white).

Results: four main themes were identified:(1) ‘Commonalities and differences in the experiences of control’: a reduction in symptoms such as itch and sleep loss characterised eczema control, but what level was acceptable differed across participants;(2) ‘Eczema control goes beyond the skin’: psychological factors, social factors, the constant scratching and the impact on everyday activities are a variety of ways an individual can be impacted;(3) ‘Stepping up and down of treatment’: participants’ stepped-up treatment in response to loss of control, but several factors complicated this behaviour. Control needed to be maintained after stepped-up treatment ended to be acceptable; and (4) ‘How to measure control’: self-report was generally preferred to allow frequent measurements and to capture unobservable features. Although most thought their eczema needed to be measured frequently, many also felt that this was not always realistic or desirable.

Conclusions: ‘Eczema control’ is a complex experience for people with eczema and parents of children with the condition. These experiences could have important implications on how long-term control should be measured in eczema clinical trials and clinical practice.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 August 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 November 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 415699
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415699
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: d3dbd245-08ea-4b3c-95fe-a3a80f66a333
ORCID for Miriam Santer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7264-5260

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2017 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Laura Howells
Author: Joanne Chalmers
Author: Fiona Cowdell
Author: Sonia Ratib
Author: Miriam Santer ORCID iD
Author: Kim Thomas

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