Transferring patients's experiences of change from the context of physiotherapy to daily life.

International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being
Tove Dragesund, Aud Marie Øien

Abstract

Purpose: In the treatment of patients with long-lasting musculoskeletal pain, the challenge is to identify causal and sustaining factors and targeted treatment in order to improve function. Norwegian Psychomotor Physiotherapy (NPMP) is an approach often applied to patients with such pain. Long-term NPMP processes from the patients' perspective have been studied and discussed in the light of phenomenology of the body.The study purpose was to explore what kind of changes patients with long-lasting musculoskeletal pain experience during NPMP and further transfer into daily life context.Methods: A phenomenological, descriptive, and retrospective design was applied. Two focus-group interviews were conducted with 11 patients receiving such treatment. The interviews were audiotaped, transcribed, and analysed inspired by Giorgi's phenomenological methodology.Results: The analysis resulted in an overarching structure: "To develop embodied ownership of oneself over time", and two themes describing the essence of change that the patients experienced: (1) "To get an embodied grip on oneself through treatment"; (2) "To give oneself space in daily life".Conclusions: Enhanced embodied self-perception involving a sense of embodied ownership an...Continue Reading

References

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Jan 19, 2000·Trends in Cognitive Sciences·I Gallagher
Apr 19, 2003·Physiotherapy Research International : the Journal for Researchers and Clinicians in Physical Therapy·Alice KvåleTom Backer Johnsen
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May 17, 2008·Physical Therapy·Kirsten Ekerholt, Astrid Bergland
Jun 25, 2008·Physiotherapy Theory and Practice·Tove Dragesund, Målfrid Råheim
May 12, 2009·Qualitative Health Research·Laura M Funk, Kelli I Stajduhar
Jun 22, 2012·Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences·Randi SvilandKari Martinsen

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