| Overall evaluation | Clients’ experiences ranged from very positive to
neutral.‘It was about me, not only about
the multiple sclerosis, it was really about
me.’ (M1)‘The questions were to
the point and it made me aware of what I myself hoped
and expected of my rehabilitation. Every patient should
have a conversation like this, this is what
rehabilitation is all about.’
(M10)‘It was okay but had no impact on
my rehabilitation.’ (M7) | Clinicians were unanimous in their belief that meaning is
important in rehabilitation.‘I was able to
attune more deliberately to my patient's needs and
goals.’ (physician)‘I think it
is a form of investment in the collaboration with the
patient when we explicitly address these things [global
meaning]. We show them that they matter, that we really
want to know who they are and what is important to
them.’ (social worker)‘I
noticed that the whole team started thinking on that
level <of global goals> again and not just focus
on their own discipline.’ (physician
assistant)Clinicians varied in their appreciation of
the tool.‘Engaging in this conversation
created more awareness and prompted me to ask just that
one extra question.’
(physician)‘The meaningful overall goals
I read in the summary were similar to the ones in my own
assessment’. (occupational therapist) |
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| Impact on motivation | Clients frequently mentioned the connection between global
meaning and motivation. Referring to values or relationships
they talked about in the session on global meaning, clients
regularly told themselves:‘This is what I
want to accomplish and this is why’. (S4,
M4) | Clinicians noticed the impact of the session on global
meaning on motivation.‘With one patient, we
agreed that she would go to the gym with her sister,
instead of doing her exercises here. She could not
motivate herself to come here, because she didn't want
to be a patient. Going to the gym with her sister worked
for her.’ (physical therapist) |
| Impact on behaviour change | A client continued to be active in her sports, but in an
adapted way, and based on another part of her global
meaning. At first, her activity in sports was based on the
value of self-enhancement and the identity of a
winner:‘I am someone who wants to win’.
After the session and her rehabilitation, it was based
more on the value of enjoying the activity and on
relationships, being part of a group: ‘if I can
participate in small parts, and enjoy it, then it's
okay’. (M1) | Clinicians saw global meaning as an important source of
intrinsic motivation for behaviour change.‘I
think that global meaning can help clarify a person's
intrinsic reason for change. It is important to find and
use that reason’. (social
worker)‘A patient's being is what should
be the source of their motivation. I would never set a
goal which does not involve a person's global meaning,
because it gives you very little chance of maintaining
the changed behavior.’ (physical
therapist) |
| Stability of global meaning and goals | Clients experienced global meaning and meaningful overall
goals as stable, and adapted specific goals using meaningful
overall goal as a reference.‘Those three
goals, whether I can really reach them remains the
question, but those are the things that make life
meaningful to me. That remains the same.’
(S4)‘I expressed myself to the world,
first by making movies, now by making blogs. At first I
could still type my own texts, now I need to dictate and
some days my voice isn't even good enough for that. But
that is important to me: expressing myself to the
world.’ (M6)‘I am pleased with
myself because this week I went running and I enjoyed
it. I used to be pleased because I was faster than other
people. I am not faster anymore. But I still am pleased
with myself, and that is what is important to
me.’ (S2) | Clinicians used the stable overall goals to provide
direction for the specific goals.‘Goals do
change. Every six weeks we set new rehabilitation goals,
because someone is in another phase. But our overall
rehabilitation treatment, that we agree “we are going in
that direction,” that did not change.’
(physician assistant) |
| Existential distress | One client found the summary of her global meaning so
confronting, that she did not want her partner or anybody
else to read it.‘I thought no, this is not
who I am! I thought: this is out of proportion, I am not
in as bad a state as these words suggest. So I never
reacted to the question whether this was okay to put
into my file. The description was correct, though. I
said those things. But I don't want anyone to read them
and perhaps use against me.’ (M8) | Diminished physical and mental capacities led to confusion
and distress in a client, raising questions such
as:‘Who am I, what is my value in life,
now that I cannot contribute the way I did.’
(physician) |
| Process of setting meaningful goals | The session on global meaning came at the right time for
most clients.‘It helped me prioritize and
keep agency over my rehabilitation process.’
(S4)Some clients stated that the global meaning
session came too early: ‘Doing this interview
created a dilemma. Isn't it too much for me? Should I do
it because I promised? I want to make things easy for
myself. I need all my strength to do my therapies. I
still don't know if it was the right decision to
come.’ (M2) | Therapists stated that the tool did influence the way in
which they approached their clients.‘For
example, the patient that told us that he needed to be
pushed: I wouldn't have known. And it worked for
him.’ (physician assistant)‘I
had the idea that it was sort of the same as what I had
already recorded. I did not gain new answers or
insights.’ (occupational
therapist)‘That patient that said “I
prioritize differently now”, I asked her “how does that
relate to your global meaning”, and after a moment of
looking at me with glassy eyes (laughs) she could answer
that really well. So, I use it actively.’
(physical therapist) |
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