Affiliations 

  • 1 School of Social Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Putrajaya, Malaysia
  • 2 Center for Hearing and Balance of Zhuhai, Zhuhai Hospital of Integrated of Traditional Chinese Medicine and Western Medicine, Affiliated Hospital of the Faculty of Chinese Medicine, Zhuhai Hospital Affiliated to Southern Medical University Macao University of Science and Technology, Zhuhai, People's Republic of China
  • 3 Department of Otolaryngology, Affiliated Eye and Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) Hospital of Fudan University, Shanghai, People's Republic of China
  • 4 Department of Otolaryngology, Ningbo First Hospital, Ningbo, People's Republic of China
  • 5 Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Affiliated Drum Tower Hospital of Nanjing University Medical School, Nanjing, People's Republic of China
  • 6 Cardiff School of Health Sciences, Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff, UK
Int J Audiol, 2024 May;63(5):334-341.
PMID: 37093086 DOI: 10.1080/14992027.2023.2199441

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The lived experience of tinnitus has biopsychosocial characteristics which are influenced by sociocultural factors. The main purpose of this study is to investigate how tinnitus affects people in their everyday life in China. A deductive qualitative analysis examined whether an a priori Western-centric conceptual framework could extend to an Asian context.

DESIGN: A large-scale prospective survey collected patient-reported problems associated with tinnitus in 485 adults attending four major ENT clinics in Eastern and Southern mainland China.

RESULTS: The evidence suggests that patients in China express a narrower range of problem domains associated with the lived experience of tinnitus. While 13 tinnitus-related problem domains were confirmed, culture-specific adaptations included the addition uncomfortable (a novel concept not previously reported), and the potential exclusion of concepts such as intrusiveness, loss of control, loss of peace and loss of sense of self.

CONCLUSIONS: The sociocultural context of patients across China plays an important role in defining the vocabulary used to describe the patient-centred impacts of tinnitus. Possible explanatory factors include cultural differences in the meaning and relevance of certain concepts relating to self and in help-seeking behaviour, low health literacy and a different lexicon in Chinese compared to English to describe tinnitus-related problems.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.