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A vocabulary describing health-terms of movement quality–a phenomenological study of movement communication

Skjaerven, Liv Helvik ; Gard, Gunvor LU ; Gómez-Conesa, Antonia and Catalan-Matamoros, Daniel (2020) In Disability and Rehabilitation 42(22). p.3152-3161
Abstract

Purpose: The aim of the study was to develop a vocabulary targeting communication of health-terms of movement quality, establishing professional knowledge of a movement terminology usefull within rehabilitation. Methods: A phenomenological study design was chosen, inviting movement experts working in rehabilitation to describe movement observations when a change into more functional, health related ways of moving appeared in the rehabilitation processes. 15 physiotherapy experts were recruited, five from the field of neurology, primary health care and psychiatry. The informants had between 12-38 years of clinical practice, treating patients of all ages with a wide specter of diagnoses. Data collection followed a qualitative study... (More)

Purpose: The aim of the study was to develop a vocabulary targeting communication of health-terms of movement quality, establishing professional knowledge of a movement terminology usefull within rehabilitation. Methods: A phenomenological study design was chosen, inviting movement experts working in rehabilitation to describe movement observations when a change into more functional, health related ways of moving appeared in the rehabilitation processes. 15 physiotherapy experts were recruited, five from the field of neurology, primary health care and psychiatry. The informants had between 12-38 years of clinical practice, treating patients of all ages with a wide specter of diagnoses. Data collection followed a qualitative study design, of individual, in-depth interviews, based on a semi-structured interview guide. The interviews were taped, transcribed and sent to the informants for validation. Data analysis followed recommendation of Giorgi, modified by Malterud. Ethical considerations were followed. Results: Data revealed a vocabulary, clustered in five themes, Biomechanical, Physiological, Psycho-socio-cultural, Existential and Overarching perspective, 16 underlying categories and 122 descriptive health-terms of movement quality. Conclusion: The study demonstrated a multi-perspective movement vocabulary of 122 health characteristic terms, developed to facilitate movement communication within the broad field of rehabilitation. The result calls for further research concerning a movement vocabulary.Implications for Rehabilitation The phenomenon of movement quality has a potential for promoting rehabilitation-specific skills. A vocabulary describing health-terms of movement quality is useful within the overall rehabilitation field providing enhanced and specific health directed communication. A movement specific health-terminology will have impact on implications and facilitating a person-centered and goal directed rehabilitation. Rehabilitation professionals will have a multi-perspective, movement specific and structured terminology to communicate direct and concretely with patients, the multi-professional team, in society, and with politicians.

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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
basic body awareness therapy, movement health-terms, movement quality, Movement vocabulary, professional movement communication
in
Disability and Rehabilitation
volume
42
issue
22
pages
10 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85064737832
  • pmid:31009266
ISSN
0963-8288
DOI
10.1080/09638288.2019.1585970
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9baf3466-2247-45a7-a19d-4b71ce6320d1
date added to LUP
2019-05-07 13:23:00
date last changed
2024-05-28 08:25:58
@article{9baf3466-2247-45a7-a19d-4b71ce6320d1,
  abstract     = {{<p>Purpose: The aim of the study was to develop a vocabulary targeting communication of health-terms of movement quality, establishing professional knowledge of a movement terminology usefull within rehabilitation. Methods: A phenomenological study design was chosen, inviting movement experts working in rehabilitation to describe movement observations when a change into more functional, health related ways of moving appeared in the rehabilitation processes. 15 physiotherapy experts were recruited, five from the field of neurology, primary health care and psychiatry. The informants had between 12-38 years of clinical practice, treating patients of all ages with a wide specter of diagnoses. Data collection followed a qualitative study design, of individual, in-depth interviews, based on a semi-structured interview guide. The interviews were taped, transcribed and sent to the informants for validation. Data analysis followed recommendation of Giorgi, modified by Malterud. Ethical considerations were followed. Results: Data revealed a vocabulary, clustered in five themes, Biomechanical, Physiological, Psycho-socio-cultural, Existential and Overarching perspective, 16 underlying categories and 122 descriptive health-terms of movement quality. Conclusion: The study demonstrated a multi-perspective movement vocabulary of 122 health characteristic terms, developed to facilitate movement communication within the broad field of rehabilitation. The result calls for further research concerning a movement vocabulary.Implications for Rehabilitation The phenomenon of movement quality has a potential for promoting rehabilitation-specific skills. A vocabulary describing health-terms of movement quality is useful within the overall rehabilitation field providing enhanced and specific health directed communication. A movement specific health-terminology will have impact on implications and facilitating a person-centered and goal directed rehabilitation. Rehabilitation professionals will have a multi-perspective, movement specific and structured terminology to communicate direct and concretely with patients, the multi-professional team, in society, and with politicians.</p>}},
  author       = {{Skjaerven, Liv Helvik and Gard, Gunvor and Gómez-Conesa, Antonia and Catalan-Matamoros, Daniel}},
  issn         = {{0963-8288}},
  keywords     = {{basic body awareness therapy; movement health-terms; movement quality; Movement vocabulary; professional movement communication}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{22}},
  pages        = {{3152--3161}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Disability and Rehabilitation}},
  title        = {{A vocabulary describing health-terms of movement quality–a phenomenological study of movement communication}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2019.1585970}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/09638288.2019.1585970}},
  volume       = {{42}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}