传记的延续:台湾中风幸存者及其家庭照顾者的康复。

Zih-Yong Liao, Elaine Haycock-Stuart, Susanne Kean
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:从原住民社区和非原住民社区的中风幸存者及其家庭照顾者的角度,探讨与长期护理服务相关的经验:背景:中风的发生是一个改变生命的事件,与中风幸存者及其家人的生活质量息息相关, 尤其是那些提供主要支持的人。由于健康方面的差异,原住民更有可能在更年轻的时候发生中风,住院和死亡的可能性也更高。很少有研究对家庭组合或原住民进行调查,以了解他们应对身体-自我改变的经验,以及中风后重新融入社区的背景:在2018-2019年的9个月中,对原住民、城市居民和非原住民进行了人种学田野调查,在3个地理行政社区对12对夫妇进行了48次观察和24次访谈:研究结果:阐明了中风后的康复轨迹,勾勒出二人组从传记中断到传记延续的生活转变。这一轨迹由涉及四种心态和三种状态的七种状态所形成。四种心态是失落感和忧虑感、相互依存感、独立感和幸福状态。本研究确定的状态通道是接受、改变和认同。以社区为基础、以家庭为中心的长期护理系统,与医疗保健和社区资源相结合,通过以下方式巩固了每个双亲的生平延续:(1) 提供康复服务,为康复适应提供时间和空间;(2) 承认家庭照顾者的个性,帮助减轻他们的多重任务;以及 (3) 使中风幸存者重新融入社区。决定原住民参与者康复质量的关键是他们重新融入原住民社区并重新获得身份认同。因此,将脑卒中后护理融入各种护理环境中,并将原住民的具体需求纳入政策制定中,可以帮助二人适应他们的社区。
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Biographical continuation: recovery of stroke survivors and their family caregivers in Taiwan.

Aim: To explore the experiences pertaining to long-term care services from the perspectives of dyads of stroke survivors and their family caregivers in indigenous and non-indigenous communities.

Background: Stroke occurrence is a life-changing event associated with quality of life for stroke survivors and their families, especially those who provide primary support. Indigenous people are more likely to experience a stroke at a younger age and have a higher likelihood of hospitalisation and death due to health disparities. Few studies have investigated family dyads or indigenous populations to understand their experiences of coping with changed body-self and to contextualise their reintegration into communities post-stroke.

Methods: Ethnographic fieldwork over nine months in 2018-2019 with indigenous, urban-based, and non-indigenous populations, resulting in 48 observations and 24 interviews with 12 dyads in three geo-administrative communities.

Findings: The post-stroke recovery trajectory is illuminated, delineating the dyads' life transitions from biographical disruption to biographical continuation. The trajectory is shaped by seven states involving four mindsets and three status passages. The four mindsets are sense of loss and worry, sense of interdependence, sense of independence, and wellbeing state. The status passages identified in this study are acceptance, alteration, and identification. A community-based and family-centred long-term care system, aligning with medical healthcare and community resources, underpinned each dyad's biographical continuation by: (1) providing rehabilitation that afforded time and space for recovery adaptation; (2) acknowledging the individuality of family caregivers and helping to alleviate their multitasking; and (3) reintegrating stroke survivors into their communities. Key to determining the quality of recovery for the indigenous participants was their reintegration into their native community and regaining of identity. Therefore, integrating post-stroke care into various care contexts and incorporating indigenous-specific needs into policymaking can support dyads in adapting to their communities.

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