PURPOSE: This article describes the use of the World Health Organization's (WHO) International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) as a conceptual framework for processing and analyzing the narratives of 50 community-dwelling women with a spinal cord injury. The women were participants in a federally-funded study of stress and coping over the life course. METHOD: The paper describes the development of a coding scheme and data reduction techniques used to process qualitative data. RESULTS: The initial results of three phases of data analysis are then presented: (i) the construction of matrices to display data so as to permit pattern finding; (ii) the mapping of specific ICF codes to text to produce a more finely grained analysis of environment-related stressors, and (iii) a thematic analysis of text depicting the dynamics of person-environment interaction. CONCLUSIONS: Of potential value to the further elaboration of the ICF is a fleshing out of the personal factors component of the ICF and the provision of a context-driven, process view of person-environment interaction. It is hoped that this article will stimulate continued discussion of person-level factors. The concept of coupling suggests also a need to focus research attention on the bi-directional and ever evolving linkages connecting person to environment.
PURPOSE: This article describes the use of the World Health Organization's (WHO) International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) as a conceptual framework for processing and analyzing the narratives of 50 community-dwelling women with a spinal cord injury. The women were participants in a federally-funded study of stress and coping over the life course. METHOD: The paper describes the development of a coding scheme and data reduction techniques used to process qualitative data. RESULTS: The initial results of three phases of data analysis are then presented: (i) the construction of matrices to display data so as to permit pattern finding; (ii) the mapping of specific ICF codes to text to produce a more finely grained analysis of environment-related stressors, and (iii) a thematic analysis of text depicting the dynamics of person-environment interaction. CONCLUSIONS: Of potential value to the further elaboration of the ICF is a fleshing out of the personal factors component of the ICF and the provision of a context-driven, process view of person-environment interaction. It is hoped that this article will stimulate continued discussion of person-level factors. The concept of coupling suggests also a need to focus research attention on the bi-directional and ever evolving linkages connecting person to environment.
Authors: Anna M Fineberg; Lauren M Ellman; Catherine A Schaefer; Seth D Maxwell; Ling Shen; Nashid H Chaudhury; Aundrea L Cook; Michaeline A Bresnahan; Ezra S Susser; Alan S Brown Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2015-12-18 Impact factor: 3.222
Authors: Jun Suzurikawa; Yuki Sawada; Miwa Sakiyama; Motoi Suwa; Takenobu Inoue; Tomoko Kondo Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-03-08 Impact factor: 3.390