Literature DB >> 20350208

Whiplash patients' experience of a multimodal rehabilitation programme and its usefulness one year later.

Margaretha Rydstad1, Marie-Louise Schult, Monika Löfgren.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study aimed to explore and analyse how, 1 year after completing a rehabilitation programme, persons with long-term pain due to whiplash-associated disorders (WAD) experienced their participation, and what knowledge and strategies they had gained from it for handling their daily occupations.
METHODS: The study had an emergent design. Thematised research interviews were conducted with nine informants. The results were analysed according to the constant-comparison grounded-theory method.
RESULTS: Data analysis resulted in one core category, 'learning to manage WAD, a rehabilitation process', and three associated categories: 'chaos in life', 'a light in the tunnel' and 'managing long-term pain'. The core category and the categories describe the process the informants underwent from how they experienced life when starting rehabilitation to one year after completion.
CONCLUSION: The informants described living with long-term whiplash-associated pain as 'chaos' before the rehabilitation programme. Participation helped them realise that there was a possible way for them to control their pain, regain their daily occupation and return to work. One year after rehabilitation the informants had started to accept their situation and regain occupations and life roles.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20350208     DOI: 10.3109/09638281003734425

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Disabil Rehabil        ISSN: 0963-8288            Impact factor:   3.033


  4 in total

1.  Change Narratives That Elude Quantification: A Mixed-Methods Analysis of How People with Chronic Pain Perceive Pain Rehabilitation.

Authors:  Timothy H Wideman; Alice Boom; Jennifer Dell'Elce; Kate Bergeron; Janick Fugère; Xiangying Lu; Geoff Bostick; Heather C Lambert
Journal:  Pain Res Manag       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 3.037

Review 2.  Exploring patients' experiences of the whiplash injury-recovery process - a meta-synthesis.

Authors:  Anne Söderlund; Lena Nordgren; Michele Sterling; Britt-Marie Stålnacke
Journal:  J Pain Res       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 3.133

Review 3.  The work of return to work. Challenges of returning to work when you have chronic pain: a meta-ethnography.

Authors:  Mary Grant; Joanne O-Beirne-Elliman; Robert Froud; Martin Underwood; Kate Seers
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-06-20       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Return to work a bumpy road: a qualitative study on experiences of work ability and work situation in individuals with chronic whiplash-associated disorders.

Authors:  A Peolsson; A Hermansen; G Peterson; E Nilsing Strid
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2021-04-23       Impact factor: 3.295

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.