Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence

Background: The mainstay treatment for eczema is leave-on emollients. The aim of this study was to find out more about unwanted effects that have been reported with their use, as little is known due to a lack of formal reporting. Aims: To gain a greater understanding of eczema patients’ experienc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oakley, Robert, Lawton, Sandra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: British Dermatological Nursing Group 2016
Online Access:http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/
http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/
http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/1/DN%20Article.pdf
id nottingham-43536
recordtype eprints
spelling nottingham-435362017-10-13T00:13:11Z http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/ Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence Oakley, Robert Lawton, Sandra Background: The mainstay treatment for eczema is leave-on emollients. The aim of this study was to find out more about unwanted effects that have been reported with their use, as little is known due to a lack of formal reporting. Aims: To gain a greater understanding of eczema patients’ experiences of unwanted effects such as stinging, what influence unwanted effects had on their therapy, why subsequent variations in leave-on emollient adherence followed and what patients desire in their emollients. Methods: An anonymous online survey was conducted among eczema patients and their carers in March 2016 (using SurveyMonkeyTM). Results: 210 respondents, including adults and young people with eczema plus carers of children with eczema, which included family and friends. 68% (n=126/185) reported a wide range of 38 unwanted effects. Accounts highlighted the impact on quality of life of these unwanted effects and variations to eczema management that followed. 71% (90/126) of respondents stopped a leave-on emollient due to unwanted effects. Desired characteristics in emollients related to the absence of unwanted effects and product improvements. Conclusion: Eczema patients and their carers all reported high levels of unwanted effects from leave-on emollient use. Experiences of unwanted effects were multifactorial but common themes arose as did the desire for emollient improvements. Unwanted effects need to be considered when optimising therapy. British Dermatological Nursing Group 2016-12-16 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/1/DN%20Article.pdf Oakley, Robert and Lawton, Sandra (2016) Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence. Dermatological Nursing, 15 (4). pp. 38-43. ISSN 1477-3368 http://www.bdng.org.uk/
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
language English
description Background: The mainstay treatment for eczema is leave-on emollients. The aim of this study was to find out more about unwanted effects that have been reported with their use, as little is known due to a lack of formal reporting. Aims: To gain a greater understanding of eczema patients’ experiences of unwanted effects such as stinging, what influence unwanted effects had on their therapy, why subsequent variations in leave-on emollient adherence followed and what patients desire in their emollients. Methods: An anonymous online survey was conducted among eczema patients and their carers in March 2016 (using SurveyMonkeyTM). Results: 210 respondents, including adults and young people with eczema plus carers of children with eczema, which included family and friends. 68% (n=126/185) reported a wide range of 38 unwanted effects. Accounts highlighted the impact on quality of life of these unwanted effects and variations to eczema management that followed. 71% (90/126) of respondents stopped a leave-on emollient due to unwanted effects. Desired characteristics in emollients related to the absence of unwanted effects and product improvements. Conclusion: Eczema patients and their carers all reported high levels of unwanted effects from leave-on emollient use. Experiences of unwanted effects were multifactorial but common themes arose as did the desire for emollient improvements. Unwanted effects need to be considered when optimising therapy.
format Article
author Oakley, Robert
Lawton, Sandra
spellingShingle Oakley, Robert
Lawton, Sandra
Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
author_facet Oakley, Robert
Lawton, Sandra
author_sort Oakley, Robert
title Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
title_short Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
title_full Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
title_fullStr Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
title_full_unstemmed Views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
title_sort views on unwanted effects of leave-on emollients and experiences surrounding their incidence
publisher British Dermatological Nursing Group
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/
http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/
http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/43536/1/DN%20Article.pdf
first_indexed 2018-09-06T13:26:58Z
last_indexed 2018-09-06T13:26:58Z
_version_ 1610864832874020864