845
Views
25
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Research Article

Narrative environments and the capacity of disability narratives to motivate leisure-time physical activity among individuals with spinal cord injury

, &
Pages 2089-2096 | Received 28 Sep 2012, Accepted 27 Jun 2013, Published online: 06 Aug 2013

References

  • Regan M, Teasell RW, Keast D, et al. Pressure ulcers following spinal cord injury. In: Eng JJ, Teasell RW, Miller WC, et al., eds. Spinal cord injury rehabilitation evidence. Vancouver: SCIRE; 2010: 1–48
  • Craven C, Krassioukov A, Ashe MC, Eng JJ. Bone health following spinal cord injury. In: Eng JJ, Teasell RW, Miller WC, et al., eds. Spinal cord injury rehabilitation evidence. Vancouver: SCIRE; 2010:1–26
  • Warburton DER, Sproule S, Krassioukov A, Eng JJ. Cardiovascular health and exercise following spinal cord injury. In: Eng JJ, Teasell RW, Miller WC, et al., eds. Spinal cord injury rehabilitation evidence. Vancouver: SCIRE; 2012:1–43
  • Krause JS, Broderick L. A 25-year longitudinal study of the natural course of aging after spinal cord injury. Spinal Cord 2005;43:349–56
  • Teasell RW, Mehta S, Loh E, et al. Pain following spinal cord injury. In: Eng JJ, Teasell RW, Miller WC, et al., eds. Spinal cord injury rehabilitation evidence. Vancouver: SCIRE; 2012:1–72
  • Tonack M, Hitzig SL, Craven BC, et al. Predicting life satisfaction after spinal cord injury in a Canadian sample. Spinal Cord 2008;46:380–5
  • McKinley WO, Meade MA. Community integration following SCI. NeuroRehabilitation 2004;19:79–80
  • Hetz SP, Latimer AE, Arbour-Nicitopoulos KP, Martin Ginis KA. Secondary complications and subjective well-being in individuals with chronic spinal cord injury: associations with self-reported adiposity. Spinal Cord 2011;49:266–72
  • Martin Ginis KA, Latimer AE, Mckechnie K, et al. Using exercise to enhance subjective well-being among people with spinal cord injury: the mediating influences of stress and pain. Rehabil Psychol 2003;48:157–64
  • Martin Ginis KA, Jetha A, Mack DE, et al. Physical activity and subjective well-being among people with spinal cord injury: a meta-analysis. Spinal Cord 2010;48:65–72
  • Martin Ginis KA, Arbour-Nicitopoulos KP, Latimer AE, et al. Leisure time physical activity in a population-based sample of people with spinal cord injury Part I: demographic and injury-related correlates. Archiv Phys Med Rehabil 2010;91:722–8
  • Gainforth HL, Latimer-Cheung AE. Getting the wheels in motion: physical activity promotion for people with spinal cord injury, in spinal cord injuries: causes, risk factors and management. Hauppage, New York: Nova Science Publishers; 2012
  • Latimer AE, Martin Ginis KA, Arbour KP. The efficacy of an implementation intention intervention for promoting physical activity among individuals with spinal cord injury: a randomized controlled trial. Rehabil Psychol 2006;51:273–80
  • Arbour-Nicitopoulos KP, Martin Ginis KA, Latimer AE. Planning, leisure-time physical activity, and coping self-efficacy in persons with spinal cord injury: a randomized controlled trial. Archiv Phys Med Rehabil 2009;90:2003–11
  • Ajzen I. The theory of planned behavior. Organ Behav Hum Decis Process 1991;50:179–211
  • Latimer AE, Martin Ginis KA. The theory of planned behavior in prediction of leisure time physical activity among individuals with spinal cord injury. Rehabil Psychol 2005;50:389–96
  • Schwarzer R. Self-efficacy in the adoption and maintenance of health behaviors: theoretical approaches and a new model. In: Schwarzer R, ed. Self-efficacy: thought control of action. Washington, D.C.: Hemisphere; 1992:217–42
  • Perrier M-J, Sweet SN, Strachan SM, Latimer-Cheung AE. I act, therefore I am: athletic identity and the health action process approach predict sport participation among individuals with acquired physical disabilities. Psychol Sport Exerc 2012;13:713–20
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Narrative inquiry in sport and exercise psychology: what can it mean, and why might we do it? Psychol Sport Exerc 2009;10:1–11
  • Frank AW. The wounded storyteller: body, illness, and ethics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1995: xviii, 213 p
  • Frank AW. Letting stories breathe: a socio-narratology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 2010
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Contrasting perspectives on narrating selves and identities: an invitation to dialogue. Qual Res 2008;8:5–35
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Changing bodies, changing narratives and the consequences of tellability: a case study of becoming disabled through sport. Sociol Health Illn 2008;30:217–36
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Men, sport, and spinal cord injury: an analysis of metaphors and narrative types. Disabil Soc 2004;19:613–26
  • Sparkes AC, Smith B. Men, sport, spinal cord injury and narrative time. Qual Res 2003;3:295–320
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Men, sport, spinal cord injury, and narratives of hope. Soc Sci Med 2005;61:1095–105
  • Roberts B. Health narratives, time perspectives and self-images. Soc Theory Health 2004;2:170–83
  • Brittain I. Perceptions of disability and their impact upon involvement in sport for people with disabilities at all levels. J Sport Soc Iss 2004;28:429–52
  • Sparkes AC, Smith B. Sport, spinal cord injury, embodied masculinities, and the dilemmas of narrative identity. Men Masculinities 2002;4:258–85
  • Gubrium JF, Holstein JA. Narrative ethnography. In: Hesse-Biber SN, Leavy P, eds. Handbook of emergent methods. New York: Guilford Press; 2008:241–64
  • Lieblich A, Tuval-Mashiach R, Zilber T. Narrative research reading, analysis and interpretation. Thousand Oaks (CA): Sage Publications; 1998
  • Sparkes AC. Narrative analysis: exploring the whats and hows of personal stories. In: Holloway M, ed. Qualitative research in health care. Milton Keynes: Open University Press; 2005:91–109
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Narrative inquiry in psychology: exploring the tensions within. Qual Res Psychol 2006;3:169–92
  • Smith J, Deemer D. The problem of criteria in the age of relativism. In: Denzin NLY, ed. Handbook of qualitative research. Thousand Oaks (CA): Sage; 2000
  • Tracy SJ. Qualitative quality: eight “big-tent” criteria for excellent qualitative research. Qual Inq 2010;16:837–51
  • Crossley ML. Narrative psychology, trauma and the study of self/identity. Theory Psychol 2000;10:527–46
  • Charmaz K. Struggling for a self: identity levels of the chronically ill. In: Roth J, Conrad P, eds. Research in the sociology of health care: a research manual. Greenwich (CT): JAI Press Inc; 1987:283–321
  • Sparkes AC, Perez-Samaniego V, Smith B. Social comparison processes, narrative mapping and their shaping of the cancer experience: a case study of an elite athlete. Health 2012;16:467–88
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Men, sport, spinal cord injury and narrative time. Qual Res 2003;3:295–320
  • Sparkes AC. When narratives matter: men, sport, and spinal cord injury. Med Humanit 2005;31:81–8
  • Smith B, Sparkes AC. Exploring multiple responses to a chaos narrative. Health 2011;15:38–53
  • Seymour W. Time and the body: re-embodying time in disability. J Occup Sci 2002;9:135–42
  • Polkinghorne D. Narrative knowing and the human sciences. Albany (NY): State University of New York Press; 1988
  • Schell LA. A content analysis of CBS’s coverage of the 1996 Paralympic Games. Adapt Phys Activ Q 1999;16:27–47
  • Smith A, Thomas N. The ‘inclusion’ of elite athletes with disabilities in the 2002 Manchester Commonwealth Games: an exploratory analysis of British newspaper coverage. Sport Educ Soc 2005;10:49–67
  • Pappous A, Marcellini A, de Leseleuc E. From Sydney to Beijing: the evolution of the photographic coverage of Paralympic Games in five European countries. Sport Soc 2011;14:345–54
  • Brockmeier J. Autobiographical time. Narrat Inq 2000;10:51

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.