Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis

Introduction: This thesis explored Chronic Neuropathic Pain (CNP) patients' experiences of the treatment journey of Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) surgery, considering life prior to, and after the surgery. Previous SCS literature has predominantly focused on technology, SCS efficacy, and the rol...

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Main Author: Turner, Anna
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12807/
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author Turner, Anna
author_facet Turner, Anna
author_sort Turner, Anna
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: This thesis explored Chronic Neuropathic Pain (CNP) patients' experiences of the treatment journey of Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) surgery, considering life prior to, and after the surgery. Previous SCS literature has predominantly focused on technology, SCS efficacy, and the role of psychological factors in SCS patient selection and outcomes. Whilst research highlights SCS as an effective treatment for various CNP conditions, it predominantly employs quantitative outcome measures, thereby reducing the depth of information yielded about the experience of SCS surgery and patient satisfaction. There is a dearth of in-depth understanding of the lived experience of the SCS surgery treatment journey. Objectives: The aim of this thesis was to explore participant experiences of the SCS surgery treatment journey considering life prior to and after the surgery. Methods: Ethical and NHS trust approval were obtained. A purposive sample of seven CNP patients who had undergone SCS surgery 2-8 months previously were recruited. Each participant took part in a face-to-face semi-structured interview which was audio recorded. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). Results: Three super-ordinate themes were generated: Diminished control and coping, identity transitions and SCS conflict. The themes were interpreted as being interconnected with each other. To demonstrate the treatment journey, all themes were included in the journal paper and further details of convergences and divergences between participants were included in the extended paper. Discussion: In line with previous research, patients’ expectations of SCS surgery were significant in patient satisfaction with the outcomes, reinforcing the importance of identifying and addressing expectations in pre-surgery preparation. Given SCS is often the last treatment option; the current study found post-SCS participants were going through a process of acceptance of lost identities and of current pain relief and capabilities. Simultaneously, participants were adjusting to living with the stimulator, indicating the significance of offering psychological treatments adjunct to SCS treatment to support participants through these processes. Difficulties in acceptance of identity changes and adjustment to SCS could negatively impact on mood and sense of control which can have adverse effects on pain perception.
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spelling nottingham-128072025-02-28T11:21:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12807/ Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis Turner, Anna Introduction: This thesis explored Chronic Neuropathic Pain (CNP) patients' experiences of the treatment journey of Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS) surgery, considering life prior to, and after the surgery. Previous SCS literature has predominantly focused on technology, SCS efficacy, and the role of psychological factors in SCS patient selection and outcomes. Whilst research highlights SCS as an effective treatment for various CNP conditions, it predominantly employs quantitative outcome measures, thereby reducing the depth of information yielded about the experience of SCS surgery and patient satisfaction. There is a dearth of in-depth understanding of the lived experience of the SCS surgery treatment journey. Objectives: The aim of this thesis was to explore participant experiences of the SCS surgery treatment journey considering life prior to and after the surgery. Methods: Ethical and NHS trust approval were obtained. A purposive sample of seven CNP patients who had undergone SCS surgery 2-8 months previously were recruited. Each participant took part in a face-to-face semi-structured interview which was audio recorded. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). Results: Three super-ordinate themes were generated: Diminished control and coping, identity transitions and SCS conflict. The themes were interpreted as being interconnected with each other. To demonstrate the treatment journey, all themes were included in the journal paper and further details of convergences and divergences between participants were included in the extended paper. Discussion: In line with previous research, patients’ expectations of SCS surgery were significant in patient satisfaction with the outcomes, reinforcing the importance of identifying and addressing expectations in pre-surgery preparation. Given SCS is often the last treatment option; the current study found post-SCS participants were going through a process of acceptance of lost identities and of current pain relief and capabilities. Simultaneously, participants were adjusting to living with the stimulator, indicating the significance of offering psychological treatments adjunct to SCS treatment to support participants through these processes. Difficulties in acceptance of identity changes and adjustment to SCS could negatively impact on mood and sense of control which can have adverse effects on pain perception. 2012-12-13 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12807/1/ANNA_TURNER_FINAL_THESIS.pdf Turner, Anna (2012) Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis. DClinPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Spinal cord stimulation Chronic neuropathic pain Patient perspective Qualitative research Interpretative phenomenological analysis Lived experience
spellingShingle Spinal cord stimulation
Chronic neuropathic pain
Patient perspective
Qualitative research
Interpretative phenomenological analysis
Lived experience
Turner, Anna
Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_full Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_fullStr Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_full_unstemmed Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_short Treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_sort treatment journey of spinal cord stimulation surgery: an interpretative phenomenological analysis
topic Spinal cord stimulation
Chronic neuropathic pain
Patient perspective
Qualitative research
Interpretative phenomenological analysis
Lived experience
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12807/