Lived experiences of patients using positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy: a nested phenomenological study within the 3DPiPPIn randomised controlled trial
Stephanie K Mansell, Francesca Gowing, Stephen T. Hilton, Eleanor Main, Swapna Mandal, Silvia Schievano, Cherry Kilbride

TL;DR
This study explores the lived experiences of patients using positive airway pressure therapy to better support treatment and guide future research.
Contribution
It provides novel qualitative insights into the lived experiences of PAP therapy users, going beyond existing negative experience-focused studies.
Findings
The study will use phenomenological methods to explore patients' lived experiences of PAP therapy.
Findings will inform clinical practice and future research priorities for sleep disordered breathing treatment.
Results will be shared through multiple accessible formats to reach both professionals and patients.
Abstract
Sleep disordered breathing is a chronic condition often requiring patient commitment to positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy. Understanding the lived experience of PAP therapy users is crucial for clinicians to support successful treatment and identify research priorities. There is a lack of evidence in this area, and published data predominantly explore the negative experiences of PAP. This study aims to explore the lived experiences of patients using PAP therapy. This study employs a phenomenological approach, appropriate for researching human experiences where there is little existing research. Heideggerian theory underpins the research, recognising that the researcher’s beliefs influence meaning, allowing for rich analysis of the lived experience. Participants will be recruited from a randomised controlled trial investigating the medium-term clinical impact of customised…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObstructive Sleep Apnea Research · Sleep and related disorders · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
