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1. The Influence of Concussion on Athletes’ Occupational Identity
2. Agenda Topic
Research Process
Definitions
Initial Model
Critical Review and Development of Model
Final Model
Relevance to OS and OT
Gaps & Future Directions
Facilitated Discussion
5. What is the influence of concussion on athletes’ occupational identity?
6. Research Process Search interfaces: Ovid, Pubmed, Cambridge Scientific
Databases: PsychInfo, Medline, Sport Discus, Cinahl, ERIC
Keywords: concussions, mild traumatic brain injury, head injury, athletic injury, career-ending injury, athletes, elite athletes, athletic identity, athletic role, sports injury, depression, psychological effects
7. Research Process Cont’d… Inclusion criteria for research articles
Related to at least one component of the topic
Well designed study
Added new information to topic area
Shortfalls in research process
General difficulty in finding relevant research topic
Concussion specific literature
Occupational identity and lack of participation in sports
8. Definitions Occupational Identity
“a composite sense of who one is and wishes to become as an occupational being generated from one’s history of occupational performance”
shaped by capacities, interests, roles, relationships, obligations, routines, environment contexts and expectations
volition, habits and lived, bodily experiences combine to create an occupational identity that is a “means of self definition and a blueprint for upcoming action”
(Kielhofner, 2002)
Athletic Identity
"degree to which an individual identifies with the athlete role"
(Brewer, Van Raalte & Linder, 1993)
9. Definitions Cont’d…
10. Definitions Cont’d… Occupational Deprivation
“a state of prolonged preclusion from engagement in occupations of necessity and/or meaning due to factors which stand outside of the control of the individual”
Occupational Disruption
“a transient or temporary condition of being restricted from participation in necessary or meaningful occupations such as that caused by illness, temporary relocation, or temporary unemployment”
(Townsend, 1996)
11. Initial Model
12. “I think it just really bummed her out, because she had been doing it for so long and that becomes part of who she was. When that’s not who you are anymore, then you’re kind of lost”
(Female, Trainer, Age 21)
(Granito, 2001)
13. Mainwaring, L. M., Bisschop, S. M., Green, E. A., Antoniazzi, M., Comper, P., Kristman, V., Provvidenza, C. & Richards, D. W. (2004). Emotional Reaction of Varsity Athletes to Sport- Related Concussion. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 26, 119-135.
14. Purpose
To compare emotional functioning of university athletes with MTBI (concussion) to that of uninjured teammates and physically active undergraduates.
Literature
Previous studies lack pre-injury mood assessment
Design of Study
Quantitative study
15.
Methods
Sample: Groups of U of T students: concussed athletes, uninjured teammates of concussed athletes and healthy, physically active undergraduate students
Measured baseline mood state with a preseason medical and neuropsychological assessment
Following concussion, athletes completed a series of assessments for 4 weeks
Demographic questionnaire
Short version of the Profile of Mood States (POMS)
16. Results
No difference in POMS ratings among the three groups at pre-injury.
Significant interactions were observed for the POMS subscales of depression, confusion and total mood disturbance, which indicate that concussion and control groups respond differently in terms of mood across the 4 sessions.
17. Conclusions
The three groups were not emotionally different according to baseline testing.
Concussed group showed higher ratings of depression, confusion and total mood disturbance
Emotional reactions may be the result of:
removal of play
transient biochemical disturbances following brain injury.
19. Brock, S.C. & Kleiber, D.A. (1994). Narrative in Medicine: The stories of elite college athletes’ career-ending injuries. Qualitative Health Research, 4(4), 411- 430.
20. Purpose
To illustrate the relevance of narrative to medical practice
To demonstrate systematic method for assessing illness narratives using the stories of elite college athletes who experienced career-ending injury
Literature Review
Narrative has been used as an explanatory complement to quantitative research
Injured athletes are ideal to demonstrate the general view of illness and how another approach would be helpful to understand the illness experience
21. Design of study
Qualitative study
Methods
Narrative Analytic Method
Individual interviews were conducted: face-to-face or by phone
Sample:17 former college athletes whose sport careers were ended by injury
Interviews assessed using core-narrative approach
22. Results
Injury interpreted as a disruption in the life narrative had a negative impact on self-esteem and identity
Stories of injured athletes follow a clinically relevant pattern, like a book with 6 “chapters”.
The impact of sport culture:
laminility - the experience of an ambiguous, undefined, and invisible condition because of lack of role (on team);
stigma - feelings regarding the loss of a celebrated state and acquisition of a state of relative ordinariness.
23. Conclusion
Information about the athlete’s personal experiences with injury gives insight into the psychosocial impact of injury not just physiological impact.
It is important to include narrative in medical practice in order to get a holistic picture of the client and capture what the injury means to them.
The perspective derived from illness narratives would be an appropriate complement to the biomedical view.
24. FINAL MODEL
27. Relevance Occupational Science
Substantiates the link between occupational identity and occupational deprivation/disruption
Contributes to the understanding of athletic identity in relation to occupational identity
28. Relevance Cont’d… Occupational Therapy
The extent to which an athlete identifies with their athlete role may determine adherence to the rehabilitative process
Reinforces the importance of a holistic approach to clinical intervention (i.e., psychological/emotional effects of concussion)
29. Gaps and Future Research
31. Discussion “I was disappointed. One, because you’re not in the spotlight anymore and I think that whenever you’re in the spotlight and then it’s shut off for you, I think there’s always some kind of identity crisis and I’m sure there was.”
“All the sudden you’re standing on the outside looking in. You feel kind of lost for a while. And I felt that way for a long time … It wasn’t so much a loss of self-esteem as maybe – I always felt like people were looking at me differently, like I was something less than I was before.”
(Brock & Kleiber, 1994)
32. Discussion Cont’d… Tell us about your rehabilitation experience (with respect to concussion or other athletic injury)
How do you think seeing an OT could have contributed to the rehabilitation process?
33. Thank You!