Laurentian University, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Qual Health Res. 2011 Feb;21(2):187-98. doi: 10.1177/1049732310383865. Epub 2010 Sep 20.
The purpose of this work was to develop an understanding of the meaning of disability for individuals living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in a Canadian midwestern community from an emic perspective. A focused ethnographic design was used. Fifteen individuals participated in interviews. Narrative analysis was used to examine the interview data. Data analysis revealed 65 dilemma stories consisting of two structural components: the impairment, and the justification/explanation of the impairment. Participants' impairment might or might not have been known to others. In both situations, individuals were faced with choices of whether to explain/justify or attempt to conceal the impairment. Participants told these dilemma stories to convey the meaning of COPD as a disability invisible to others, and at times, to themselves. The information gained from this research will serve as an essential complement to the existing knowledge about this important yet often invisible chronic illness.
这项工作的目的是从本土视角出发,理解加拿大中西部社区中患有慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)的个体对残疾的意义。采用了聚焦民族志设计。15 名参与者参加了访谈。使用叙事分析来检查访谈数据。数据分析揭示了 65 个困境故事,由两个结构组成部分:损伤和损伤的解释/说明。参与者的损伤可能为他人所知,也可能不为他人所知。在这两种情况下,个人都面临着是否解释/说明或试图隐瞒损伤的选择。参与者讲述这些困境故事是为了传达 COPD 作为一种对他人和有时对自己都不可见的残疾的意义。从这项研究中获得的信息将是对这一重要但往往看不见的慢性疾病现有知识的重要补充。