How does a narrative understanding of change in families post brain injury help us to humanise our professional practice?

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
C. Whiffin, C. Ellis-Hill
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we critically explore the discourse of change post brain injury and challenge the dominant discourse of negative change, which alone leaves little room for other perspectives to exist. These negative changes pose a considerable risk to the well-being of families who may benefit from engaging in richer accounts making room for a more coherent and connected sense of self and family post-injury. We explore how narrative approaches provide opportunities for all practitioners to expand their professional scripts and support families to move towards a future which is not dominated by a discourse of loss. While loss and negative change is an important and very real consequence, of brain injury, focusing purely on stories of loss is life limiting for family members and can cause psychological distress. The life thread model is offered as a visible tool for all practitioners to engage with and use while working with families, providing a concrete focus for reflection and discussion of narratives relating to change which otherwise can feel quite abstract in everyday practice. We argue that one way we can humanise our professional practice is to support all practitioners to engage in a narrative understanding of family change following ABI.
对脑损伤后家庭变化的叙事理解如何帮助我们将专业实践人性化?
在本文中,我们批判性地探讨了脑损伤后变化的话语,并挑战了消极变化的主导话语,这使得其他观点几乎没有存在的空间。这些负面变化对家庭的福祉构成了相当大的风险,这些家庭可能会受益于参与更丰富的账户,为受伤后的自我和家庭意识提供更连贯和联系的空间。我们探讨了叙事方法如何为所有从业者提供机会,扩展他们的专业剧本,并支持家庭走向一个不受失去话语支配的未来。虽然损失和负面变化是脑损伤的一个重要而非常真实的后果,但仅仅关注损失的故事会限制家庭成员的生活,并可能导致心理困扰。生命线模型作为一种可见的工具,供所有从业者在与家庭合作时参与和使用,为反思和讨论与变化有关的叙述提供了具体的焦点,否则在日常实践中可能会感到相当抽象。我们认为,我们能够使我们的专业实践人性化的一种方法是支持所有从业者参与ABI之后家庭变化的叙事理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Brain Impairment
Brain Impairment CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-NEUROSCIENCES
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
30
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal addresses topics related to the aetiology, epidemiology, treatment and outcomes of brain impairment with a particular focus on the implications for functional status, participation, rehabilitation and quality of life. Disciplines reflect a broad multidisciplinary scope and include neuroscience, neurology, neuropsychology, psychiatry, clinical psychology, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, speech pathology, social work, and nursing. Submissions are welcome across the full range of conditions that affect brain function (stroke, tumour, progressive neurological illnesses, dementia, traumatic brain injury, epilepsy, etc.) throughout the lifespan.
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