Psychological meanings reported by patients with Graves’ Disease in hyperthyroidism but without ophthalmopathy about their quotidian life: A qualitative study conducted in a Brazilian university specialized outpatient service
L. S. Valladão, F. S. Silva, C. F. Casagrande, L. M. Guerra, D. E. Zantut-Wittmann, E. R. Turato

TL;DR
This study explores how Brazilian patients with Graves' Disease interpret their illness and treatment, revealing psychological meanings that could improve patient care.
Contribution
The paper introduces novel psychodynamic insights into how patients with Graves' Disease without ophthalmopathy perceive their condition and treatment.
Findings
Patients described their disease as a sudden life-changing event, metaphorically referred to as an 'atomic bomb'.
Patients often viewed their illness as a metaphor for personal blame, linking it to psychological distress.
Patients expressed confusion and potential non-adherence to treatment due to the overwhelming number of medications.
Abstract
To handle well clinical treatments, it is crucial to know the expectations of patients who seek help. We need to ask ourselves: how do patients interpret subjectively their diagnosis, treatments, and self-care? Medical Psychology brings us theories for this understanding. Grave’s Disease is an autoimmune disorder, a form of hyperthyroidism with a goitre, affecting also the eyes and the skin, as well as emotional manifestations. Weight loss, sometimes psychologically welcome, although due to a disease, can mean a psychoanalytic secondary gain. So, the medicine that leads to clinical improvement can be taken with ambivalence and bad adherence to treatment. It is important to differentiate between disease, a scientific entity explained by the clinical professional, and illness as a patient’s subjective perception of an un-health. To understand psychodynamically the fantasies, desires, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments
