6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126cee5
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Physiotherapists' accounts of their clients in geriatric inpatient rehabilitation.
Mima CattanUlla TalvitieMarjo WallinSirkka-liisa Karppisubject
AdultMaleHealth Services for the AgedDiscourse analysismedicine.medical_treatmentFrail ElderlyMEDLINEContext (language use)Health PromotionInterviews as TopicNursingSocial needsmedicineHumansFinlandPhysical Therapy ModalitiesAgedAged 80 and overInpatientsRehabilitationbusiness.industryQualitative interviewsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthProfessional-Patient RelationsMiddle AgedHealth promotionFemalebusinessInpatient rehabilitationdescription
This article aims to describe how physiotherapists working with frail older people talk about their clients. Semi-structured qualitative interviews with physiotherapists (n = 11) were audio recorded, transcribed and analysed using discourse analysis. Two accounts were identified: (i) older adults as recipients of a treatment intervention at the rehabilitation centre, with the dimensions 'a focus on physical impairments' and 'a focus on social needs' and (ii) older adults as partners in an exercise intervention to support their everyday living at home. Older adults' everyday living context was not considered in the approach where, in an isolated and objectified manner, the physiotherapists focused on physical impairments. Placing great emphasis on the clients' social needs in turn implied passive treatments. In both instances the physiotherapists' activities were focused on the present, that is, the time of the clients' stay at the rehabilitation facility, rather than on their everyday challenges at home. These aspects were taken into accounts to a greater extent when older adults were positioned as partners and functional limitations were contemplated in relation to domestic daily living.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-12-01 | Scandinavian journal of caring sciences |