Eating Experiences of People with Disabilities: A Qualitative Study in Spain
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Waning Bodies: Assumption of a Diminished Corporality
I had to break them, I used to do it before cooking them―it was almost an engineering procedure since they were already the thinnest kind of noodles, but I had to do it to avoid feeling pain.
Sometimes, at home, I go to the fridge and grab a bit of ham because I cannot stand it anymore to see food and not being able to swallow it [...] When I do this I feel I have eaten properly, I feel satisfied because I have eaten, but it is a feeling compounded with a fear of choking.(Jesús, 70 years old. Laryngeal cancer)
Although I do not feel hungry, they feed me because I have to be fed, and that’s that. It does not feel like I am eating [...] The way I eat nowadays fills me up, sometimes it stops me feeling hungry, but I do not feel that I am eating since I cannot taste the food, I do not chew or swallow it, it is completely artificial.(Javier, 65 years old. Laryngeal cancer)
3.2. Social Redefinition of Food-Related Spaces
[...] the carers lost patience and ended up feeding me themselves. They made me eat everything, and afterward I felt unwell. [...] They told me off all the time―if I ate too slowly, if I did not eat, and eventually they fed me themselves. They made me eat too fast, and the food did not sit well.(Benito, 71 years old. Acquired brain damage)
[...] would leave my bottom right on the edge of the chair, putting the bucket underneath so it would catch the pee. This way I could go to the bars and restaurants that I liked, and I was allowed to do this, and my husband did not have to carry me on his back any more to climb the stairs to the toilet.(María, 50 years old. Muscular dystrophy)
Preparing food was rather sad and repetitive, first everything had to be finely blended and it was really hard, and then it had to be added to the mix and the smell was horrible, like medicine, not appealing at all―yet I had to feed it to my son because there was nothing else he could have.(Isabel, Samuel’s mother. Samuel, 18 years old, suffers from Niemann–Pick disease)
3.3. Burden, Shame, and Loneliness
While I eat I drop a lot of food and once I heard a man saying aloud that it was disgusting, and he turned his back on me so he would not see me. Since that day, I prefer to eat when I am alone.(Paloma, 60 years old. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis)
Because of my issues we do not celebrate anymore, everybody knows that not being able to eat like they do is a source of grief, so to avoid it we do not celebrate with food, which is what we used to do in my family―like almost everybody else does, this is Spain!(Javier, 65 years old. Laryngeal cancer)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Count (n) | |
---|---|
Gender | |
Feminine | 6 |
Masculine | 21 |
Age groups | |
Under 50 | 7 |
50 and over | 20 |
Disability | |
Brain injury | 6 |
Spinal cord injury | 5 |
Cancer | 10 |
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | 1 |
Multiple sclerosis | 2 |
Muscular dystrophy | 2 |
Niemann–Pick | 1 |
Biography |
---|
Clinical history, socio-demographic and socio-economic data |
Illness progression |
Memories prior to impairment, how it started, habits, routines |
The patient’s role |
Accepting the illness; phenomenology; emotions; disruption |
Food and feeding |
Feelings and emotions |
Food and social activities |
The value of food |
Self-sufficiency and changes |
Expectations about the future |
Fears, desires, carers’ expectations |
Treatment itinerary |
Sorrow, narratives, knowledge, chronicity, healing |
Community and personal relationships |
Successes, failures, crises, discrimination |
Categories | Subcategories |
---|---|
Feeding | Prior to illness; aid equipment; meals after the illness; food restrictions; food and eating pleasure; eating difficulties |
Self-sufficiency | Loss; fear of death; freedom vs dependency; disillusion |
Changes | Loss of vital roles; identity; family; environment |
Eating (social activity) | Preferences (eating alone); access difficulties; forsaking the practice of eating with others; culinary isolation/loneliness |
Discrimination | Shame; loss of capacity; other people’s reactions; stigmatisation; liability |
Expectations | Current role; fear of being a burden; carers’ expectations; desires |
Habits | Feelings; routines; changes in habits and routines |
Meal organisation | Food shopping; food preparation; menu organisation; obligations |
Illness progression | Initial stages; understanding; diagnostics; experiences; hospitals; feelings; illness as a “journey”; loss; metaphors; diminished corporality |
Social relationships | Exclusion; solitude; jealousy; escape; giving up |
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Cipriano-Crespo, C.; Rodríguez-Hernández, M.; Cantero-Garlito, P.; Mariano-Juárez, L. Eating Experiences of People with Disabilities: A Qualitative Study in Spain. Healthcare 2020, 8, 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040512
Cipriano-Crespo C, Rodríguez-Hernández M, Cantero-Garlito P, Mariano-Juárez L. Eating Experiences of People with Disabilities: A Qualitative Study in Spain. Healthcare. 2020; 8(4):512. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040512
Chicago/Turabian StyleCipriano-Crespo, Carmen, Marta Rodríguez-Hernández, Pablo Cantero-Garlito, and Lorenzo Mariano-Juárez. 2020. "Eating Experiences of People with Disabilities: A Qualitative Study in Spain" Healthcare 8, no. 4: 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040512
APA StyleCipriano-Crespo, C., Rodríguez-Hernández, M., Cantero-Garlito, P., & Mariano-Juárez, L. (2020). Eating Experiences of People with Disabilities: A Qualitative Study in Spain. Healthcare, 8(4), 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare8040512