Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 7-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Family caregivers' reactions and coping for persons with brain injury

Family caregivers' reactions and coping for persons with brain injury Background : This study was a follow-up of a previous study on the empowerment of families caring for Chinese persons with brain injury. Objective : The present study examined, in a qualitative way, the impact of brain injury on the family and the complex array of factors that appears to be related to effective family coping and their independence. The reactions of families under stress and their coping strategies are summarized. Individual families' differences in terms of an empowerment framework are discussed for possible guidance in family intervention. Method : Individual families were interviewed using open-ended questions, their responses and the verbatim transcripts of long interviews performed with selected families were examined. Results : A total of 50 family members were successfully recruited for interview. They were found to show typical coping strategies, including shock and uncertainty, which are suggested to be relating closely to the nature of brain injury and the difficulties in managing it. The physical and psychological burdens involved in caring for members with brain injury were also reflected. Content analysis of the long interviews of four selected families showed that it was not every family that coped well. Possible factors leading to better adjustment, such as clear personal expectations, a desire to master the situation, strong motivation, flexibility to adjust life goals and awareness of one's own powerless state are proposed. Conclusion : The results indicated that family coping varies with individual families and should be explored further for the development of intervention guidelines. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Brain Injury Taylor & Francis

Family caregivers' reactions and coping for persons with brain injury

Brain Injury , Volume 16 (12): 13 – Jan 1, 2002
13 pages

Loading next page...
 
/lp/taylor-francis/family-caregivers-apos-reactions-and-coping-for-persons-with-brain-V4ScLGKnwr

References (38)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2002 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted
ISSN
1362-301X
eISSN
0269-9052
DOI
10.1080/0269905021000010087
pmid
12487717
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Background : This study was a follow-up of a previous study on the empowerment of families caring for Chinese persons with brain injury. Objective : The present study examined, in a qualitative way, the impact of brain injury on the family and the complex array of factors that appears to be related to effective family coping and their independence. The reactions of families under stress and their coping strategies are summarized. Individual families' differences in terms of an empowerment framework are discussed for possible guidance in family intervention. Method : Individual families were interviewed using open-ended questions, their responses and the verbatim transcripts of long interviews performed with selected families were examined. Results : A total of 50 family members were successfully recruited for interview. They were found to show typical coping strategies, including shock and uncertainty, which are suggested to be relating closely to the nature of brain injury and the difficulties in managing it. The physical and psychological burdens involved in caring for members with brain injury were also reflected. Content analysis of the long interviews of four selected families showed that it was not every family that coped well. Possible factors leading to better adjustment, such as clear personal expectations, a desire to master the situation, strong motivation, flexibility to adjust life goals and awareness of one's own powerless state are proposed. Conclusion : The results indicated that family coping varies with individual families and should be explored further for the development of intervention guidelines.

Journal

Brain InjuryTaylor & Francis

Published: Jan 1, 2002

There are no references for this article.