Brief Article
Copyright ©2012 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Nov 21, 2012; 18(43): 6240-6249
Published online Nov 21, 2012. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v18.i43.6240
Table 1 Characteristics of synthesised studies
Ref.Theoretical perspectiveSampling strategyRecruitment settingData collection methodAnalytical approach
Dudley-Brown[17]PhenomenologicalConvenience sample (n = 3)Patients sampled from IBD outpatient clinic when attending for their scheduled appointmentIn depth semi structured interviewsCoding and memo system used, grouped and transformed into an interpretive understanding of the phenomenology of living with UC, with the extraction of emergent themes
Daniel et al[51]PhenomenologicalPurposive sample (n = 5)Patients recruited by an advertisement in national newspaperIn depth semi structured interviewsKings Goal Attainment Framework used as theoretical framework; thematic content analysis of interviews to develop themes in line with this framework
Hall et al[50]Grounded theoryPurposive sample (n = 31)Recruited from a previous unconnected study, sampled by lowest quintile of UK-IBDQ, established low quality of lifeIn depth interviews and focus groupsConcurrent data collection and analysis to identify emerging themes; selective coding was used to enabled theoretical framework
Burger et al[38]Interpretive phenomenological designConvenience sample (n = 8)Participants from mailing list of Indiana Chapter of Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America, answered advert and recruited according to inclusion/exclusion criteriaIn depth interviews, each participant interviewed 3 timesThematic analysis, identification analysis and identification of paradigm cases used
Lynch et al[53]PhenomenologicalPurposive sample (n = 4)Participants recruited from Crohn’s and Colitis New ZealandSemi structured in depth interviewsThematic analysis from transcribed data, ongoing process of interpretation used to refine themes to describe nature of the experience
Pihl-Lesnovska et al[52]Grounded theoryTheoretical sample(n = 11)Patients recruited from the gastroenterology outpatient clinicUnstructured in depth interviewsConstant comparative analysis used, saturation determined sample size; core category and related categories identified; two authors analysed all interview transcripts
Cooper et al[54]FrameworkPurposive sampling (n = 24)Patients sampled from IBD outpatient clinic when attending for their scheduled appointmentSemi structured in depth interviewsThematic content analysis using framework
Table 2 Demographics of synthesised studies
Ref.DateCountryAge rangeGenderDiseaseDisease durationSample size
Dudley-Brown[17]1996United States30-50 yr1 female; 2 male3 ulcerative colitis1-10 yr3
Daniel et al[51]2001Canada18-24 yr2 female; 3 maleIBD not specified< 2 yr5
Hall et al[50]2005United KingdomNot specified but all > 16 yr19 female; 12 male14 Crohn’s disease; 17 ulcerative colitisNot specified but all > 2 yr31
Burger et al[38]2005United States30-65 yr6 female; 2 male6 Crohn’s disease; 2 ulcerative colitis2-40 yr8
Lynch et al[53]2007New Zealand16-21 yr3 female; 1 maleAll Crohn’s disease< 18 mo4
Pihl-Lesnovska et al[52]2010Sweden29-83 yr5 female; 6 maleAll Crohn’s disease2-33 yr11
Cooper et al[54]2010United Kingdom30-40 yr11 female; 13 male12 Crohn’s disease; 12 ulcerative colitis1- > 10 yr24
Table 3 Themes and concepts
1st order constructsRef.2nd order constructsLine of argument synthesis
Limitations/missing out on life events[17,38,50-54]Detained by disease (“pull”)“Pushed and pulled: a compromised life”.Constant conflict between IBD and normal life results in a compromised life.Pushes to be normal but IBD pulls individual back.
Humiliation of incontinence[17,50,51,53,54]Fear of incontinence - unpredictability, humiliation
Social isolation[17,38,50,51,53,54]Behaviour due to fear of incontinence - avoidance
Unpredictability[38,50-53]Impact of behaviour - socially isolated, missing out on life events, limited life, relationship burden, feeling damaged
Powerlessness[17,38,53,54]Fatigue
Feeling damaged[38,52-54]
Impact on relationships[17,38,50-54]
Negative emotions[17,50-54]
Stress[38,51-54]
Fatigue[38,50-53]
A disease for life[38, 51-53]Living in a world of disease
Fear of long term effects[38, 51-53]
Invisible disease[38,50,53,52]
Acceptance yet fight[38,53,54]Wrestling with life (“push”)
Knowing my body[38,53,54]Striving to thrive
Control[38,51-54]
Maintaining normality[38,50,52,53]