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1.
Physiother Theory Pract ; : 1-33, 2023 Jul 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37498170

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Physical therapists supporting patients in intensive care unit (ICU) rehabilitation can improve their clinical practice with insight in patients' lived body experiences. OBJECTIVE: To gain insight in patients' lived body experiences during ICU stay and in recovery from critical illness. METHODS: Through a comprehensive systematic literature search, 45 empirical phenomenological studies were identified. Patients' lived body experiences were extracted from these studies and synthesized following the seven-phase interpretative approach as described by Noblit and Hare. RESULTS: Three lines of argument were illuminated: 1) "recovery from critical illness starts from a situation in which patients experience the lived body as unable;" 2) "patients experience progress in recovery from critical illness when the lived body is empowered;" and 3) "recovery from critical illness results in a lived body changed for life." Eleven third-order constructs were formulated as different kinds of bodies: 1) "an intolerable body;" 2) "an alienated body;" 3) "a powerless body;" 4) "a dependent body;" 5) "a restricted body;" 6) "a muted body;" 7) "a touched body;" 8) "a transforming body;" 9) "a re-discovering body;" 10) "an unhomelike body;" and 11) "a remembering body." CONCLUSION: Patients' lived body experiences during ICU stay and in recovery from critical illness have richly been described in phenomenological studies and were synthesized in this meta-ethnography.

2.
Nurs Ethics ; 9(1): 36-50, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16010896

ABSTRACT

Twenty-seven health care providers from three nursing homes were interviewed about the autonomy of stroke patients in rehabilitation wards. Data were analysed using the grounded theory method for concept development recommended by Strauss and Corbin. The core category 'changing autonomy' was developed, which identifies the process of stroke patients regaining their autonomy (dimensions: self-determination, independence and self-care), and the factors affecting this process (conditions (i.e. circumstances) and strategies of patients; strategies of care providers and families; and the nursing home). Teamwork on increasing patient autonomy is recommended, which can be stimulated by multidisciplinary guidelines and education, and by co-ordination of the process of changing autonomy.


Subject(s)
Nurse's Role , Nursing Homes/standards , Patient Care Team/ethics , Personal Autonomy , Self Care/ethics , Stroke Rehabilitation , Stroke/nursing , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Needs Assessment , Netherlands , Nurse-Patient Relations/ethics , Nursing Methodology Research , Patient Care Team/standards , Patient Education as Topic/standards , Patient Participation , Self Care/methods , Social Support , Stroke/psychology
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