UC Research Repository

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The UC Research Repository collects, stores and makes available original research from postgraduate students, researchers and academics based at the University of Canterbury.

 

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Recent Submissions

ItemOpen Access
Shared ambition: Should shared mobility feature in a transition to more equitable and sustainable transport?
(2023) Kingham, Simon; Fitt , Helen; Dares , Cushla; Coppens , Anna; Curl , Angela
ItemOpen Access
NZ Perspective on Urban Forests
(2024) morgenroth, justin
ItemOpen Access
ACTIVATION active, shared and low carbon transport interventions to enhance wellbeing
(2024) Witten , Karen; Raerino, Kimiora; Kingham, Simon; Russell , Els
ItemOpen Access
New Zealand’s Economic Security Dilemma: International Pressures, Domestic Constraints
(Institute for Indo-Pacific Affairs, 2024) Tan, Alex; Vanvari N
ItemOpen Access
The Experiences of Endometriosis Patients with Diagnosis and Treatment in New Zealand
(Frontiers Media SA, 2022) Ellis K; Wood R; Munro D
Endometriosis is a chronically painful, invasive, inflammatory disease, with limited treatment options and long delays to diagnosis, which impacts 10% of females in New Zealand. Introduction: As part of a larger group discussion study, this paper covers three themes associated with endometriosis patient experiences: intensity of pain, diagnostic tool shortcomings and perspectives of treatment options. Materials and methods: The goal of this research was the inclusion of patient voices to guide research priorities. In early 2022, 50 New Zealand endometriosis patients participated in anonymous, asynchronous, text-based group discussions on the VisionsLive platform. The patients ranged in age from 18–48. The patients answered 50 questions, 23 text-based and 27 quantitative, and then took part in online group discussions. Results and discussion: The average age of symptom onset was 15.3 years, while the average delay from symptom onset to a working or surgically confirmed diagnosis was 7.91 years. The top five reported symptoms within the cohort were pain-based, and the participants discussed the many impacts of this pain on their work and education. The four main diagnostic tools employed on this cohort were abdominal ultrasound (72%), transvaginal ultrasound (68%), laparoscopy (82%) and sharing their symptom history with a medical practitioner (88%). The most common emotions patients experienced following receiving a diagnosis of endometriosis were relief (86%), feeling overwhelmed (54%), and anger (32%). The main treatments offered to this cohort were pain relief (96%), laparoscopic surgery (84%) and the combined oral contraceptive pill (80%). Of these three treatments, only laparoscopic surgery was viewed positively by the majority of users, with 67% considering laparoscopy an effective treatment, compared to 46% of users for pain relief, and 25% of users for the combined oral contraceptive pill. Conclusions: Gathering the voice of patients revealed that long delays to diagnosis and dismissal by medical practitioners frequently manifests as a reaction of relief by patients once diagnosed. Results also showed treatment options such as pain relief and hormonal medications were often considered ineffective, but were routinely offered as the first, or only, options for patients. It is therefore important that both quicker routes to diagnosis and more effective treatment options be developed.