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1.
J Eval Clin Pract ; 2023 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37723845

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Open heart surgery is a potentially traumatic experience for patients, thus posing a real risk to both the patient's physical and mental health as well as bodily integrity. All of these can greatly affect the emotional relationship to the sternotomy scar, the physical aspect of self-representation. Sternotomy scars mark patients for life, yet our knowledge of patients' subjective experiences is unknown. METHOD: In our case study, we explore the embodied experiences of a woman (42) who underwent open heart surgery with the method of interpretative phenomenological analysis combined with drawings. RESULTS: The body and the bodily experiences play a prominent role in the formation, healing process, and symbolism of a scar. The central core of the traumatic experience of open heart surgery is the attack against the patient's sensation of bodily integrity. The interviewee experiences the surgery as abuse committed on her body, a memory that is deeply etched both in the physical memory and in the form of a scar on the skin. CONCLUSION: Based on our study, it seems that the corporeal dimension of posttraumatic growth may develop after the traumatic experience of heart surgery, in which bodily intimacy with oneself and Significant Others plays a major role. In this case study, the objective reality of the heart as "sick" flesh and the "broken, pierced" bone (Körper), as well as the dissociation-and then its integration-of the lived, living body experience (Leib) are outlined. Our case study was analysed in the theoretical framework of phenomenology and psychoanalysis.

2.
Psychiatry Res Commun ; 3(1): 100101, 2023 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36573131

ABSTRACT

During the first period of coronavirus pandemic, respiratory patients may have been more vulnerable to mental health problems in addition to their physical vulnerability. The aim was to explore and deepen our understanding of the experiences of chronic respiratory patients at risk of pandemic COVID-19 using interpretative phenomenological analysis. The study involved 8 participants with asthma, COPD or cystic fibrosis. Three main themes emerged: 1. respiratory illness as a defining experience in everyday life, 2. the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the self and identity organisation, and 3. adaptation to experiencing vulnerability. Breathlessness as the most frightening feature of progressive lung disease, can be linked to fear and anxiety in different ways. The experience of vulnerability is a fundamental part of their lives. The potentially contagious nature of COVID-19 draws a sharp line between the endangered Self and the dangerous Other. In terms of their adaptation, we observe essentially self-defense mechanisms and emotion-focused strategies.

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