4 results
Search Results
2. Between disruption and continuity: challenges in maintaining the 'biographical we' when caring for a partner with a severe, chronic illness.
- Author
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Aasbø, Gunvor, Solbrække, Kari Nyheim, Kristvik, Ellen, and Werner, Anne
- Subjects
- *
OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease treatment , *CAREGIVERS , *CHRONIC diseases , *FAMILIES , *INTERVIEWING , *OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases , *MEDICAL care , *PATIENTS , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIOLOGY , *SPOUSES , *QUALITATIVE research , *HUMAN research subjects , *PATIENT selection , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ( COPD) is a progressive illness that changes the lives of patients and their spouses dramatically. The aim of this paper is to show how spouses of COPD patients integrate their tasks as informal carers with their role as spouses and the tensions and challenges involved in this. The study draws on qualitative interviews with spouses of COPD patients, recruited from the patient pool of ambulatory pulmonary services of two hospitals in Oslo, Norway. The spouses described their great efforts to re-establish normality and continuity in their everyday lives. Accomplishing this was a delicate process because they faced several dilemmas in this work. They balanced the need to sustain the independence and integrity of both parties against the need to ensure safety and deal with the progression of the illness. We propose 'biographical we' as a concept that can highlight the great effort spouses put into establishing a sense of continuity in their lives. In times when healthcare policy involves mobilising informal caregiving resources, an awareness of the complexity of caregiving relationships is crucial when developing appropriate support for informal carers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Is anybody there? Critical realism, chronic illness and the disability debate.
- Author
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Williams, Simon J.
- Subjects
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REALISM , *CHRONIC diseases , *DISABILITIES , *SOCIOLOGY , *PAIN , *DISEASES - Abstract
Taking as its point of departure the contested nature of the body, in mainstream theory and the sociology of health and illness alike, this paper seeks, albeit tentatively, to chart a critical realist alternative to these debates using the controversial terrain of chronic illness and disability as a case study. A critical realist approach, it is suggested, enables us to: (i) bring the biological body, impaired or otherwise, 'back in'; (ii) relate the individual to society in a challenging, non-conflationary or non 'unidirectional' way; and (iii) rethink questions of identity, difference and the ethics of care through a commitment to real bodies and real selves, real lives and real worlds. Within all this, it is argued, modern medicine does indeed, contra disability theory and postmodern calls for the pursuit of so-called 'arche-health', have a continuing role to play in the mitigation of human pain and suffering, including the realities of chronic disabling illness conditions and the associated 'greying' of Western populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Medical sociology, chronic illness and the body.
- Author
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Kelly, Michael P. and Field, David
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL medicine , *CHRONIC diseases , *MIND & body , *CONSCIOUSNESS , *SOCIOLOGY , *PERSONS - Abstract
The sociological conceptualisation of chronic illness requires a sociology which indicates the physicality of the body theoretically. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate how the body might be integrated into sociological accounts of the experience of chronic illness in a way that acknowledges biological and social facts. Central to our argument is the connection between bodily aspects of self and identity. Self and identity are core aspects of everyday experience and of the everyday experience of illness. With the onset of illness bodily functioning alters and self-conceptions and identity may also change. The body, which in many social situations is a taken for granted aspect of the person, ceases to be taken for granted once it malfunctions. The bodily basis of chronic illness has to be attended to because it limits or interferes with other physical and social activities. The connection between biological and social facts is explored using the concepts of self and identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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