为间质性肺病和其他肺病患者合作开发的太极课程:民族志调查。

Global advances in integrative medicine and health Pub Date : 2023-10-25 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/27536130231206122
Karen Kilgore, Jesse Leinfelder, Joan Campbell, Peter M Wayne, Robert W Hallowell, Aliaa Barakat
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:对于患有慢性和严重肺病的人来说,参加体育活动(PA)可能是一项挑战,因为他们的症状和不同的病程会产生多方面的破坏性影响。目的:我们的研究调查了一种通过合作和适应性地为肺病患者开发太极课程来增加PA的新方法,并探讨了参与者对他们在共同开发的太极课程中的体验的看法。方法:我们发起了间质性肺病(ILD)合作组织和太极基金会之间的合作,以开发适合ILD和其他肺病患者的TC类别。TC课程是在新冠肺炎大流行的早期阶段在线提供的,当时肺部患者被社会隔离。TC课程每周一次,为期12周,共有12名参与者。采用民族志实地调查方法收集观察结果,并对教师和学生进行访谈。用于理解个人、人际、社会和组织环境中因素的社会生态模型(SEM)被用来探索如何协同构思健康实践,特别是那些涉及健康行为变化的健康实践,并由有患病经历的人和对其个人和社会背景敏感的社区组织开发。数据分析采用常数比较法。结果:我们的研究结果包括:(1)创造一个支持性的课堂环境,其特点是学生和教师之间的互动和互惠关系;(2) 交替进行运动和冥想,以避免疲劳和呼吸困难;(3) 培养感官意识和身体信任,在需要时休息,在准备好时重新加入动作;(4) 通过加深存在和更新与内部和外部能量来源的重要联系来提高冥想的能力;(5) 通过冥想运动,减少伴随慢性病诊断和进展而来的持续焦虑、孤立和失落感。结论:我们记录了TC和肺部社区之间的合作,为患有慢性和严重肺部疾病的人设计了TC类别。我们使用SEM来深入了解教师如何在学生的指导下,使用有效的教学技能来创建适合特定人群的核心课程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Tai Chi Class Collaboratively Developed for Persons With Interstitial and Other Lung Diseases: An Ethnographic Investigation.

Background: Participating in physical activity (PA) can be challenging for persons with chronic and significant lung disease due to the multifaceted disruptive effects of their symptoms and variable disease course.

Objectives: Our study investigates a novel approach to increasing PA by collaboratively and adaptively developing a Tai Chi (TC) class for and by persons with lung diseases and explores participants' perceptions of their experiences in the co-developed TC class.

Methods: We initiated a collaboration between the Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) Collaborative and the Tai Chi Foundation to develop a TC class appropriate for persons with ILD and other lung diseases. The TC class was offered online, during the early phases of the COVID-19 pandemic, when pulmonary patients were isolated socially. TC class sessions were held twice weekly for 12 weeks with 12 participants. Ethnographic field methods were used to collect observations and conduct interviews with teachers and students. The Social Ecological Model (SEM) for understanding factors in intrapersonal, interpersonal, social, and organizational contexts was used to explore ways in which wellness practices, particularly those involving changes in health behaviors, can be collaboratively conceived, and developed by persons with the lived experience of illness and community organizations that are sensitive to their personal and social contexts. The constant comparative method was used for data analysis.

Results: Our findings include the importance of (1) creating a supportive class environment, characterized by interactive and reciprocal relationships among students and teachers; (2) alternating segments of movement and meditation to avoid fatigue and breathlessness; (3) cultivating sensory awareness and body trust, resting when needed and rejoining the movements when ready; (4) increasing the capacity to meditate through deepening presence and renewing the vital connection with inner and outer sources of energy; (5) reducing, through meditative movement, the persistent anxiety, isolation, and sense of loss that accompany chronic disease diagnosis and progression.

Conclusion: We documented a collaboration between the TC and pulmonary communities to design a TC class for persons with chronic and significant lung disease. We employed the SEM to provide insights into how teachers, informed by their students, can use effective pedagogical skills to create core curricula with modifications appropriate for a specific population.

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