"There's Nothing Mild About It:" The Lived Experience of Mild Traumatic Brain Injury (MTBI) From An Occupational Perspective
Abstract
This study explored everyday life for six individuals diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injury (MTBI) at least one year earlier. Using a phenomenological design, two in-depth interviews with each person explored occupations such as self-care, leisure, and productivity, as well as occupational identity, transition, and adaptation, and issues surrounding legitimacy, passing, and stigma. Analysis revealed that everyday occupations such as shopping, preparing food, driving, and managing finances, posed tremendous challenges for participants. Participants passed through denial, guilt, and grief before transitioning toward rebuilt occupational identities, and eventual occupational competency. Seeking social support and community involvement were key. Finally, participants spent considerable time seeking legitimacy within legal and medical communities, and often altered their everyday lives in order to be viewed as less brain injured. Increased knowledge about the everyday occupational lives of MTBI survivors holds valuable, practical implications for occupational therapy, and other health professions.
Subject
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
How do Health professionals' Perceptions of the Roles of Occupational Therapists Affect Occupational Therapy Practice in Interprofessional Home Health Teams?
Cheung, Sze Kei Irene (2013-08-21)Evidence shows that occupational therapists who work within interprofessional health teams sometimes have challenges delivering care to clients because other health professionals on the team have differing perceptions of ... -
Oppression: Exploring Conceptual Potential in Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy
Pooley, Elizabeth (2020-04-29)Oppression-related concepts can deepen understandings about the ways in which occupational potential (Wicks, 2001) can become narrowed. Using these concepts incorporates philosophy and theory developed by Bourdieu, Collins, ... -
What Factors Enable Therapists To Engage In The Occupation Of Evidence-Informed Occupational Therapy Practice
Harling, Danielle (2016-12-08)Engaging in evidence informed practice is an important competency for occupational therapy practice in Canada. The purpose of this qualitative study was to understand how occupational therapists are currently using evidence ...