Exploring therapeutic alliance in spinal cord injury rehabilitation: Control, identity, and liminality.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 REHABILITATION
Esha Lovrić, Niki Edwards, Julie King
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The therapeutic alliance (TA) has emerged as a key principle in enhancing the quality of health and rehabilitation services.

Purpose: This study aimed to explore patient perspectives on the influence of TAs with practitioners during inpatient rehabilitation following spinal cord injury (SCI).

Methods: Using a qualitative methodology, (n = 18) in-depth interviews were conducted with inpatient participants. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using reflective thematic analysis. The study was grounded in a social constructionist epistemology, employing theories of liminality and psychotherapy as theoretical frameworks.

Results: Patient narratives suggest TAs are central to the rehabilitation experience. Additionally, analysis of patient stories revealed that patients entered a state of liminality upon admission. The primary theme, "Control as Enabling: Transition, the Marge," highlighted during rehabilitation, patients navigated an identity separation and transition phase central to liminal spaces. Where practitioners accommodated patients' identity journeys, meaningful TAs were established, enhancing rehabilitation. Conversely, when control was constrained, TAs weakened, increasing identity risks. TAs were found to be instrumental in protecting and preserving pre-SCI identity as well as facilitating movement through the liminal phase.

Conclusion: This research underscores the significance of TAs in SCI rehabilitation, demonstrating their role in enabling patient control, safeguarding identity, and facilitating the potential exit from liminality. To address the unique needs of SCI patients, it is recommended that SCI practitioners receive specialized TA training and professional development.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
10.00%
发文量
300
期刊介绍: The aim of Physiotherapy Theory and Practice is to provide an international, peer-reviewed forum for the publication, dissemination, and discussion of recent developments and current research in physiotherapy/physical therapy. The journal accepts original quantitative and qualitative research reports, theoretical papers, systematic literature reviews, clinical case reports, and technical clinical notes. Physiotherapy Theory and Practice; promotes post-basic education through reports, reviews, and updates on all aspects of physiotherapy and specialties relating to clinical physiotherapy.
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