How parents and children evaluate emollients for childhood eczema: a qualitative study
How parents and children evaluate emollients for childhood eczema: a qualitative study
Background: eczema affects one in five children in the UK. Regular application of emollients is routinely recommended for children with eczema. There are four main emollient types, but no clear evidence of which is best. The current ‘trial and error’ approach to find suitable emollients can be frustrating for parents, children, and clinicians.
Aim: to identify how parents and children experience and evaluate emollients.
Design and setting: qualitative interview study, nested within a primary care trial of emollients (Best Emollients for Eczema [BEE] trial).
Method: semi-structured interviews with children with eczema and their parents were conducted. Participants were purposively sampled on emollient type (lotion, cream, gel, or ointment), age, and eczema severity.
Results: forty-four parents were interviewed, with children participating in 24 of those interviews. There was no clear preference for any one emollient type. The strongest theme was the variation of experience in each of the four types. Participants focused on thickness and absorbency, both positively and negatively, to frame their evaluations. Effectiveness and acceptability were both considered when evaluating an emollient but effectiveness was the primary driver for continued use. For some, participating in the trial had changed their knowledge and behaviour of emollients, resulting in use that was more regular and for a longer duration.
Conclusion: there is no one emollient that is suitable for everyone, and parents/children prioritise different aspects of emollients. Future research could evaluate decision aids and/or tester pots of different types, which could enable clinicians and parents/children to work collaboratively to identify the best emollient for them.
e390-e397
Sutton, Eileen
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Shaw, Alison
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Ridd, Matthew J.
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Santer, Miriam
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Roberts, Amanda
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Baxter, Helen
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Williams, Hywel C.
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Banks, Jonathan
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Sutton, Eileen
ae7c4bab-100e-4d79-9d5b-5343a3c5f9a3
Shaw, Alison
3581609d-522d-4c14-8ab0-10f73413a41e
Ridd, Matthew J.
918f0dce-3eed-4fc9-9091-4ccbb3fdd063
Santer, Miriam
3ce7e832-31eb-4d27-9876-3a1cd7f381dc
Roberts, Amanda
e769eddb-ce5a-413a-a5f9-2dd6c87ac1c5
Baxter, Helen
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Williams, Hywel C.
75f9b08a-e974-4f11-99d2-efd2a27f5d22
Banks, Jonathan
d8911ec8-9e2b-4060-aa29-3a23d2668b31
Sutton, Eileen, Shaw, Alison, Ridd, Matthew J., Santer, Miriam, Roberts, Amanda, Baxter, Helen, Williams, Hywel C. and Banks, Jonathan
(2022)
How parents and children evaluate emollients for childhood eczema: a qualitative study.
British Journal of General Practice, 72 (719), .
(doi:10.3399/BJGP.2021.0630).
Abstract
Background: eczema affects one in five children in the UK. Regular application of emollients is routinely recommended for children with eczema. There are four main emollient types, but no clear evidence of which is best. The current ‘trial and error’ approach to find suitable emollients can be frustrating for parents, children, and clinicians.
Aim: to identify how parents and children experience and evaluate emollients.
Design and setting: qualitative interview study, nested within a primary care trial of emollients (Best Emollients for Eczema [BEE] trial).
Method: semi-structured interviews with children with eczema and their parents were conducted. Participants were purposively sampled on emollient type (lotion, cream, gel, or ointment), age, and eczema severity.
Results: forty-four parents were interviewed, with children participating in 24 of those interviews. There was no clear preference for any one emollient type. The strongest theme was the variation of experience in each of the four types. Participants focused on thickness and absorbency, both positively and negatively, to frame their evaluations. Effectiveness and acceptability were both considered when evaluating an emollient but effectiveness was the primary driver for continued use. For some, participating in the trial had changed their knowledge and behaviour of emollients, resulting in use that was more regular and for a longer duration.
Conclusion: there is no one emollient that is suitable for everyone, and parents/children prioritise different aspects of emollients. Future research could evaluate decision aids and/or tester pots of different types, which could enable clinicians and parents/children to work collaboratively to identify the best emollient for them.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 February 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 May 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 478414
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478414
ISSN: 0960-1643
PURE UUID: 5313357d-0759-4a4b-8e30-33671a72f5e9
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Date deposited: 30 Jun 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:18
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Contributors
Author:
Eileen Sutton
Author:
Alison Shaw
Author:
Matthew J. Ridd
Author:
Amanda Roberts
Author:
Helen Baxter
Author:
Hywel C. Williams
Author:
Jonathan Banks
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