The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis

Abstract Background The diagnostic odyssey for people with a rare disease is well known, but difficulties do not stop at diagnosis. Here we investigate the experience of people, or parents of children with a diagnosed mitochondrial respiratory chain disorder (MRCD) in the management of their disease...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Janet C. Long, Stephanie Best, Sarah Hatem, Tahlia Theodorou, Toni Catton, Sean Murray, Jeffrey Braithwaite, John Christodoulou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01939-6
id doaj-1d80ee1e38fb41fbac656d2194ee3514
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1d80ee1e38fb41fbac656d2194ee35142021-07-18T11:29:36ZengBMCOrphanet Journal of Rare Diseases1750-11722021-07-0116111210.1186/s13023-021-01939-6The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosisJanet C. Long0Stephanie Best1Sarah Hatem2Tahlia Theodorou3Toni Catton4Sean Murray5Jeffrey Braithwaite6John Christodoulou7Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityAustralian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityAustralian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityAustralian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityThe Mito FoundationThe Mito FoundationAustralian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie UniversityDepartment of Paediatrics, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, University of MelbourneAbstract Background The diagnostic odyssey for people with a rare disease is well known, but difficulties do not stop at diagnosis. Here we investigate the experience of people, or parents of children with a diagnosed mitochondrial respiratory chain disorder (MRCD) in the management of their disease. The work complements ongoing projects around implementation of consensus recommendations for management of people with MRCD. People with or caring for a child with a formally diagnosed MRCD were invited to take part in an hour-long focus group held via videoconference. Questions elicited experiences of receiving management advice or information specific to their MRCD in four areas drawn from the consensus recommendations: diet and supplements, exercise, access to social services, and mental health. Sessions were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed using a combination of inductive and deductive coding. Results Focus groups were conducted with 20 participants from five Australian states in June–September 2020. Fourteen adults with a MRCD (three of whom also had a child with a MRCD), and six who cared for a child with a MRCD took part. The overarching finding was that of the need for ongoing negotiation to access the advice and service required to manage their condition. The nature of these negotiations varied across contexts but mostly related to joint decision-making, and more commonly, the need to advocate for their care with non-specialist services (e.g., dieticians, schools). The effort required for this self-advocacy was a prominent theme. While most participants reported receiving adequate advice around supplements, and to a lesser extent diet and exercise, the majority reported no formal advice around mental health or practical assistance accessing social services. Conclusion These focus groups have revealed several gaps in the system for people with a MRCD, interacting with care providers after diagnosis. Focus group participants had to negotiate with a range of different stakeholders in order to secure appropriate advice or services. Notable was the gap in appropriate generalist services (e.g., dieticians) with sufficient knowledge of MRCD to support people with their day-to-day challenges.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01939-6Qualitative researchRare diseaseManagementConsumer experienceMitochondrial
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Janet C. Long
Stephanie Best
Sarah Hatem
Tahlia Theodorou
Toni Catton
Sean Murray
Jeffrey Braithwaite
John Christodoulou
spellingShingle Janet C. Long
Stephanie Best
Sarah Hatem
Tahlia Theodorou
Toni Catton
Sean Murray
Jeffrey Braithwaite
John Christodoulou
The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
Qualitative research
Rare disease
Management
Consumer experience
Mitochondrial
author_facet Janet C. Long
Stephanie Best
Sarah Hatem
Tahlia Theodorou
Toni Catton
Sean Murray
Jeffrey Braithwaite
John Christodoulou
author_sort Janet C. Long
title The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
title_short The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
title_full The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
title_fullStr The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
title_full_unstemmed The long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
title_sort long and winding road: perspectives of people and parents of children with mitochondrial conditions negotiating management after diagnosis
publisher BMC
series Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases
issn 1750-1172
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background The diagnostic odyssey for people with a rare disease is well known, but difficulties do not stop at diagnosis. Here we investigate the experience of people, or parents of children with a diagnosed mitochondrial respiratory chain disorder (MRCD) in the management of their disease. The work complements ongoing projects around implementation of consensus recommendations for management of people with MRCD. People with or caring for a child with a formally diagnosed MRCD were invited to take part in an hour-long focus group held via videoconference. Questions elicited experiences of receiving management advice or information specific to their MRCD in four areas drawn from the consensus recommendations: diet and supplements, exercise, access to social services, and mental health. Sessions were audio-recorded, transcribed and analysed using a combination of inductive and deductive coding. Results Focus groups were conducted with 20 participants from five Australian states in June–September 2020. Fourteen adults with a MRCD (three of whom also had a child with a MRCD), and six who cared for a child with a MRCD took part. The overarching finding was that of the need for ongoing negotiation to access the advice and service required to manage their condition. The nature of these negotiations varied across contexts but mostly related to joint decision-making, and more commonly, the need to advocate for their care with non-specialist services (e.g., dieticians, schools). The effort required for this self-advocacy was a prominent theme. While most participants reported receiving adequate advice around supplements, and to a lesser extent diet and exercise, the majority reported no formal advice around mental health or practical assistance accessing social services. Conclusion These focus groups have revealed several gaps in the system for people with a MRCD, interacting with care providers after diagnosis. Focus group participants had to negotiate with a range of different stakeholders in order to secure appropriate advice or services. Notable was the gap in appropriate generalist services (e.g., dieticians) with sufficient knowledge of MRCD to support people with their day-to-day challenges.
topic Qualitative research
Rare disease
Management
Consumer experience
Mitochondrial
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-021-01939-6
work_keys_str_mv AT janetclong thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT stephaniebest thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT sarahhatem thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT tahliatheodorou thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT tonicatton thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT seanmurray thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT jeffreybraithwaite thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT johnchristodoulou thelongandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT janetclong longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT stephaniebest longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT sarahhatem longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT tahliatheodorou longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT tonicatton longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT seanmurray longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT jeffreybraithwaite longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
AT johnchristodoulou longandwindingroadperspectivesofpeopleandparentsofchildrenwithmitochondrialconditionsnegotiatingmanagementafterdiagnosis
_version_ 1721296089882034176