scholarly journals Cardiac Rehabilitation Patients’ Accounts of Their Emotional Distress and Psychological Needs: A Qualitative Study

Author(s):  
Rebecca McPhillips ◽  
Peter Salmon ◽  
Adrian Wells ◽  
Peter Fisher
2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (10) ◽  
pp. 1345-1354
Author(s):  
Fran Smith ◽  
Elizabeth Banwell ◽  
Roby Rakhit

A qualitative design was used to explore the experience of positive adjustment following a heart attack. Ten men attending a cardiac rehabilitation programme completed in-depth semi-structured interviews. An overarching theme: ‘I was in control of it from the start’ emerged with six subthemes, relating to intrapersonal and interpersonal factors and processes. The subthemes reflected the importance of identifying controllable versus non-controllable factors and employing adaptive coping strategies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Fan ◽  
Mei Zhou ◽  
Lu Wei ◽  
Lizhen Fu ◽  
Xianhong Zhang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 146879412110493
Author(s):  
Cheryl Pritlove ◽  
Jan E Angus ◽  
Craig Dale ◽  
Lisa Seto Nielsen ◽  
Marnie Kramer

The call to move beyond binary conceptualizations of gender is not new, and yet, this categorical and contrastive approach to gender analysis remains common, particularly in health sciences. It has been posited that the problem of gender dualism rests partially in the minimal interplay between theory and method. Drawing on our experiences during a qualitative study of men’s and women’s involvement in cardiac rehabilitation, this article provides an account of the analytic and reflexive challenges of conducting research on gender and health and explores how the careful use of theory, specifically Bourdieu’s theory of practice, can facilitate a departure from narrow gender binaries. The analysis presented in this article adds to methodological writings on gender and health, offering a theory-driven process to help researchers address the fluidity of gender as lived and negotiated in the everyday social and material circumstances of men and women, particularly during times of illness.


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