Journal of Patient Experience (Aug 2024)

Patient Experiences of Symptoms and Coping Strategies in the Early Postoperative Phase Following Hemithyroidectomy: A Qualitative Interview Study

  • Ervin Beka MD,
  • Oliver Gimm MD,
  • Kenth Johansson MD, PhD,
  • Anne Söderlund Schaller RN, PhD,
  • Jenny Drott RN, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735241273580
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

The aim was to explore patients’ early experiences of symptoms after hemithyroidectomy and how these symptoms influenced their daily lives. An inductive explorative qualitative research design was performed. Sixteen patients from two hospitals were interviewed between two-three weeks after the surgery. All the patients experienced compression symptoms before the surgery. The study was analyzed with conventional manifest content analysis. The inductive analysis yielded two main categories and one subcategory. The two main categories were: Early postoperative symptoms that caused disadvantage in daily life and Early postoperative symptoms and coping strategies . The subcategory was: Early postoperative experiences of concerns about the future. Key points: 1 . Patients experienced early postoperative symptoms that affected their lives in multiple levels, making them develop coping strategies and awaking concerns about remaining symptoms in the future. 2. The effect of hemithyroidectomy influenced patients’ daily life in the early postoperative phase considerably. 3. The study shows that tailored preoperative patient information is important. The findings may guide professionals to tailored preoperative information to optimize the care for this patient group.