Literature DB >> 28893102

Imaging and imagining chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): Uruguayans draw their lungs.

Megan Wainwright1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This anthropological study investigated what people imagined chronic obstructive pulmonary disease to look like in their lungs, what may be influencing these images and how this imagery shapes embodiment.
METHOD: Employing graphic elicitation, in one of multiple ethnographic interviews, participants were asked to draw their lungs: "If we could look inside your chest now, what would we see?" Lung drawings and accompanying narratives and fieldnotes from 14 participants were analyzed for themes and patterns.
RESULTS: The theme of "imaging/imagining" emerged and three distinct patterns within this theme were identified: the microscope perspective, the X-ray perspective and the reduced pulmonary capacity perspective. These patterns demonstrate how embodiment can be shaped by an integration and reinterpretation of the medical images that form part of everyday clinic visits and pulmonary rehabilitation.
CONCLUSIONS: Medical technology and images impact patients' embodiment. Understanding this is important for rehabilitation practitioners who work in a challenging space created by potentially conflicting medical narratives: on the one hand, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is incurable permanent damage, and on the other, improvement is possible through rehabilitation. Drawing could be integrated into pulmonary rehabilitation and may help identify perceptions of the body that could hinder the rehabilitation process. Implications for rehabilitation Drawings, when combined with interviews, can lead to a deeper and more complex understanding of patients' perspectives and embodiment. Rehabilitation practitioners should be concerned with how patients embody the medical technology and imagery they are exposed to as part of the educational component of pulmonary rehabilitation and healthcare generally. Asking patients to visualize their illness through drawing may help pulmonary rehabilitation practitioners identify perceptions of the body which could hinder the patient's ability to reap the full benefit of their treatment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Chronic bronchitis; Uruguay; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; drawing; emphysema; medical imagery; phenomenology

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28893102     DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2017.1376357

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


  1 in total

1.  'The body says it': the difficulty of measuring and communicating sensations of breathlessness.

Authors:  Alice Malpass; Coreen Mcguire; Jane Macnaughton
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2021-01-28
  1 in total

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