Touch and relate: body experience among staff in habilitation services
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6320Dato
2014Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
In habilitation centres staff meet children with different impairments, children who need extensive support and training
while growing up. A prevailing biomedical view of the body in habilitation services is gradually becoming supplemented by a
perspective on the body as constantly involved in experiencing and communicating, the latter involving also the bodies of
the therapists. Investigating body experience in habilitation staff in their encounters with the children may provide concepts
that make it easier to reflect on what is going on in the interaction. When shared among larger number of peers and
supported by further research in the field, reflected body experience may become a substantial aspect of professional selfknowledge.
Our aim with this study was to contribute to the understanding of what it means to be a body for other bodies in
the specific relational context of child habilitation, and more specifically to investigate what role the therapists’ body
experience may play for professional awareness and practice. In the study, five physiotherapists and three special-education
teachers spoke of physical and emotional closeness (the body as affection) but also of a provoking closeness (the body as
provoked) with the children and of how their own body experience made them more attentive to the children’s experience
(the body as reference). Situations that included bodily limitations (the body as restriction) were described, as were situations
where the body came into focus through the gazes of others or one’s own (the body as observed). The body was described
as a flexible tool (the body as tool), and hands were given an exclusive position as a body part that was constantly
communicating. Three shifts of intentionality that form a comprehensive structure for this body experience were discerned.
When professional reflection is evoked it may further body awareness, deepen reflection in practice and strengthen
intercorporeality.
Forlag
CoAction PublishingSitering
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being (2014), vol. 9:21901Metadata
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