Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury

The overall aim of this thesis was to develop knowledge of participation ineveryday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury [SCI]. This thesis hadan explorative approach, with a mixed method design: two with a quantitativemethod and two with a qualitative method.In study 1, via a two-pa...

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Main Author: Lundström, Ulrica
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Luleå tekniska universitet, Hälsa och rehabilitering 2015
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-17944
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7583-282-1
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7583-283-8 (PDF)
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-ltu-179442016-10-20T05:06:48ZEverday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injuryengLundström, UlricaLuleå tekniska universitet, Hälsa och rehabilitering2015The overall aim of this thesis was to develop knowledge of participation ineveryday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury [SCI]. This thesis hadan explorative approach, with a mixed method design: two with a quantitativemethod and two with a qualitative method.In study 1, via a two-part postal survey, 97 participants with a traumatic SCIexplored and described their leisure repertoire and how it was related to theirinterests, performance, and well-being. The results showed that participants were mostly interested in, performed, and experienced well-being from, social and cultural activities. Gender, age, and time since injury were more closely related than the level of injury to interest, performance, well-being, and changed performance in the participants’ leisure repertoire.Study 2 was performed by narrative interviews with eight participants to gain anunderstanding of participation in occupations from persons aging with a traumatic SCI. The narrative analysis resulted in a description of how they acted to participate in occupations from soon after the injury until several decades later. The results showed that their ability to act and participate in occupations changed over time due to both personal and environmental factors, and that they were concerned about their future.Study 3 described and offered an explanation for how one man viewed meaning in his everyday life while aging with a traumatic SCI. A story emerged from thenarrative analysis, which illustrated the importance for the man to be a worker and how experiences of his aging body and secondary health complications [SHC] shattered the story. Our findings show how aging with a SCI influences a person’s experiences of different dimensions of meaning in occupations.Study 4 explored and described participation in activities and the frequency ofSHC when aging with a traumatic SCI. Register data were used for the 121 eligible participants, and 73 participants answered a phone survey. The distribution between men and women was 4:1, consistent with the overall prevalence for persons with SCI. The findings show that participation in activities e.g. exercise and active recreation changed in relation to time since injury. Women reported better general health than men; still SHC increased over time, and thereby negatively affected participation in activities.To conclude, this thesis contributes with knowledge of how aging with a traumatic SCI can be a complex daily struggle in order to know how to act and continue to participate in everyday life, especially when SHC increase over time. In addition, experiences of meaning in occupations changed and occupational risk factors such as imbalance, alienation and deprivation occurred as a result of, for example not receiving sufficient and appropriate support from the society. The findings have implications for lifelong rehabilitation and provide knowledge that can guide occupational therapists in their work in enabling possibilities to participate in occupations when aging with a SCI. <p>Godkänd; 2015; 20150331 (ulrlun)</p>Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-17944urn:isbn:978-91-7583-282-1urn:isbn:978-91-7583-283-8 (PDF)Local 5f955975-f4a7-4566-85ff-4283a5ce5300Doctoral thesis / Luleå University of Technology 1 jan 1997 → …, 1402-1544application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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language English
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description The overall aim of this thesis was to develop knowledge of participation ineveryday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury [SCI]. This thesis hadan explorative approach, with a mixed method design: two with a quantitativemethod and two with a qualitative method.In study 1, via a two-part postal survey, 97 participants with a traumatic SCIexplored and described their leisure repertoire and how it was related to theirinterests, performance, and well-being. The results showed that participants were mostly interested in, performed, and experienced well-being from, social and cultural activities. Gender, age, and time since injury were more closely related than the level of injury to interest, performance, well-being, and changed performance in the participants’ leisure repertoire.Study 2 was performed by narrative interviews with eight participants to gain anunderstanding of participation in occupations from persons aging with a traumatic SCI. The narrative analysis resulted in a description of how they acted to participate in occupations from soon after the injury until several decades later. The results showed that their ability to act and participate in occupations changed over time due to both personal and environmental factors, and that they were concerned about their future.Study 3 described and offered an explanation for how one man viewed meaning in his everyday life while aging with a traumatic SCI. A story emerged from thenarrative analysis, which illustrated the importance for the man to be a worker and how experiences of his aging body and secondary health complications [SHC] shattered the story. Our findings show how aging with a SCI influences a person’s experiences of different dimensions of meaning in occupations.Study 4 explored and described participation in activities and the frequency ofSHC when aging with a traumatic SCI. Register data were used for the 121 eligible participants, and 73 participants answered a phone survey. The distribution between men and women was 4:1, consistent with the overall prevalence for persons with SCI. The findings show that participation in activities e.g. exercise and active recreation changed in relation to time since injury. Women reported better general health than men; still SHC increased over time, and thereby negatively affected participation in activities.To conclude, this thesis contributes with knowledge of how aging with a traumatic SCI can be a complex daily struggle in order to know how to act and continue to participate in everyday life, especially when SHC increase over time. In addition, experiences of meaning in occupations changed and occupational risk factors such as imbalance, alienation and deprivation occurred as a result of, for example not receiving sufficient and appropriate support from the society. The findings have implications for lifelong rehabilitation and provide knowledge that can guide occupational therapists in their work in enabling possibilities to participate in occupations when aging with a SCI. === <p>Godkänd; 2015; 20150331 (ulrlun)</p>
author Lundström, Ulrica
spellingShingle Lundström, Ulrica
Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
author_facet Lundström, Ulrica
author_sort Lundström, Ulrica
title Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
title_short Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
title_full Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
title_fullStr Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
title_full_unstemmed Everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
title_sort everday life while aging with a traumatic spinal cord injury
publisher Luleå tekniska universitet, Hälsa och rehabilitering
publishDate 2015
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-17944
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7583-282-1
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7583-283-8 (PDF)
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