超越医疗遭遇:自由联想叙事访谈法能否扩展对非癫痫发作障碍的社会心理理解?

IF 0.2 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
M. Peacock, J. Dickson, P. Bissell, R. Grunewald, M. Reuber
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本探索性跨学科研究旨在探索如何使用自由联想叙述访谈(FANI)方法在社会心理框架内扩展对非癫痫发作障碍(NEAD)的理解。NEAD是一种医学定义,可以描述为类似癫痫的具体事件,但与癫痫中发现的大脑异常放电无关。它们是神经科医生最常见的“功能性”障碍或医学上无法解释的症状(MUS)。虽然NEAD与创伤、痛苦和负面生活事件有关,但少数患者报告没有创伤史。我们认为,FANI方法产生的叙述揭示了患者未承认的创伤性事件,但可能被认为是这样的,我们探讨了该方法的哪些方面可能促进这一过程。先前的研究已经强调,诊断出NEAD通常会给患者带来极大的困扰和争议。因此,我们反思了患者需要感受到一种合法性,以及如何与NEAD诊断的生活挑战进行协商。根据本杰明(2004)关于“第三”的研究,我们认为FANI方法可以使研究访谈成为一个空间,促进以新颖的方式参与NEAD。我们的结论是,该方法可能是研究NEAD的有力工具,并且应该使用该方法进行进一步的研究,因为它可能在理解功能性神经疾病的前景方面具有更广泛的用途。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond the medical encounter: can the free association narrative interview method extend psychosocial understandings of non-epileptic attack disorder?
This exploratory interdisciplinary study was devised to explore how using the free association narrative interview (FANI) method might extend understanding of non-epileptic attack disorder (NEAD) within a psychosocial framework. NEAD is the medical definition of what can be described as embodied events that resemble epilepsy, but which are not associated with the abnormal electrical discharges in the brain found in epilepsy. They are the most frequent ‘functional’ disorder or medically unexplained symptom (MUS) seen by neurologists. While NEAD is associated with trauma, distress and negative life events, a significant minority of patients report no trauma history. The FANI method, we argue, produced narratives which shed light on events that patients have not acknowledged as traumatic, but which might be considered as such, and we explore what aspects of the method may facilitate this process. Previous work has highlighted that a diagnosis of NEAD is often experienced as deeply troubling and contentious to both give and to receive. We thus reflect on the need for patients to feel a sense of legitimacy and how the challenges of living with a NEAD diagnosis are negotiated. Drawing on the work of Benjamin (2004) on ‘thirdness’, we suggest that the FANI method can allow the research interview to become a space that facilitates novel ways of engaging around NEAD. We conclude that the method may be a powerful tool for studying NEAD, and that further studies should be undertaken using this approach since it may have broader utility in understanding the landscape of functional neurological disorders.
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