Living with tinnitus and the health care journey: An interpretative phenomenological analysis.
Elizabeth MarksPaula SmithLaurence McKennaPublished in: British journal of health psychology (2019)
Tinnitus is a biopsychosocial condition, and associated distress is affected by cognitive, behavioural, attentional, and social factors. The individuals' initial reactions to tinnitus interact with the responses of others, including health care professionals. The burden of tinnitus could be reduced by developing early interventions that offer clear, helpful, and realistic information about tinnitus and appropriate treatments. Statement of contribution What is already known on this subject? Tinnitus is the experience of an internal sound without an external sound source. It can be troubling, disabling, and chronic and usually has no clear medical cause or medical treatment, but psychological interventions are promising. Cognitive, behavioural, and attentional factors play a role in distress and therapeutic outcome. Clinical encounters are improved by aligning patient and clinician and sharing decision-making. What does this study add? It is the first in-depth study exploring how tinnitus distress and health care systems interact. It shows how a biopsychosocial approach to tinnitus may reduce tinnitus burden more effectively than a biomedical, diagnostic-focused approach. It indicates how effective early health care information could be used to reduce chronic tinnitus distress.