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Making sense of narcolepsy: a qualitative exploration of how persons with narcolepsy perceive symptoms and their illness experience

Diana Naehrig, Nicollette Thornton, Yu Sun Bin, Kristina Kairaitis, Nick Glozier
Publisher
Lived experience Sleep Public health Australia
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download linkMaking sense of narcolepsy 875.81 KB
Description

This study was completed to fill the gap in knowledge of the lived experience of persons living with narcolepsy in Australia.

The findings suggest a misalignment between persons with narcolepsy and the medical establishment around how narcolepsy symptoms are conceptualised. The authors found that persons with narcolepsy often perceive the severity of narcolepsy by the level of functional impairment rather than symptom frequency. For the first time, they also identified anticipated and internalised or ‘self-‘ stigma as the main types of stigma that persons with narcolepsy often experience.

The findings shed light on the perspectives, values, and preferences that persons with narcolepsy have around the management of care and service usage. They also highlight the substantial psychological comorbidity people with narcolepsy live with, presenting an opportunity for future research exploring the impact and possible development of stigma-related interventions.

Publication Details
License type:
CC BY-NC-ND
Access Rights Type:
open
Series:
Life Course Centre Working Paper No. 2023-22