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The lived experience of patients with uncertain medical diagnosis following a serious injury

BUTLER MP; DERRETT S; COLHOUN S
DISABIL REHABIL , 2011, vol. 33, n° 23-24, p. 2247-2254
Doc n°: 155458
Localisation : Documentation IRR

D.O.I. : http://dx.doi.org/DOI:10.3109/09638288.2011.568082
Descripteurs : DA4 - TRAUMATISMES - APPAREIL LOCOMOTEUR

This paper examines the lived experience of uncertain medical diagnosis
in patients with a serious injury. METHOD: Data reported in this article are from
the qualitative component of a multi-method study. Nineteen participants were
purposively selected from a longitudinal quantitative study (n = 2856) undertaken
in five regions of New Zealand, investigating the outcomes of injury. This article reports results from qualitative interviews taking place approximately 6
months after the injury event. RESULTS: The results section focuses on the lived
experience of the injured patient who does not have a definite diagnosis. It
describes the difficulty of persuading both health professionals and the
workplace to take ongoing injury effects seriously, when the diagnosis cannot be
clearly articulated. Issues associated with health professionals as gatekeepers
to resources are raised, and also the potential for extended uncertainty to
stigmatise the patient. Finally, the emotional impact of injury is discussed as
an issue that is not often recognised. CONCLUSION: Vague diagnostic labels
attached to serious but invisible injury potentially reduce legitimate access to
rehabilitation and the sick role.
The socio-cultural context within which
medicine is administered produces specific tensions in the clinical encounter.
It is hypothesised that patients with uncertain diagnosis may be particularly at
risk of the emergence of disability.

Langue : ANGLAIS

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