2015
DOI: 10.1159/000431258
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The Self beyond Somatic Symptoms: A Narrative Approach to Self-Experience in Adolescent Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Abstract: Background: The self and self-experience are often assumed to play an important role in adolescent patients presenting with severe somatic symptoms and bodily distress. Nonetheless, most empirical work on this subject is confined to studies of personality and patients' experience of negative emotionality. This study aims to move beyond mere descriptions of symptoms, traits and distress, and consequently adopts a narrative approach to self-experience in adolescent chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Sampling and Me… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…These results show that having information about the illness and treatment is not enough to guarantee adherence. So, as previous researchers have argued, strategies to improve adherence should not be limited to psychoeducation and cognitive-behavioral interventions, but instead include underlying, implicit affective meanings (Creer et al, 2004; Haynes et al, 2005; van Geelen, 2010), such as the patients’ personal construction of meaning to each aspect of the treatment program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These results show that having information about the illness and treatment is not enough to guarantee adherence. So, as previous researchers have argued, strategies to improve adherence should not be limited to psychoeducation and cognitive-behavioral interventions, but instead include underlying, implicit affective meanings (Creer et al, 2004; Haynes et al, 2005; van Geelen, 2010), such as the patients’ personal construction of meaning to each aspect of the treatment program.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This perspective has been used in psychotherapy research (Ecker, Ticic, & Hulley, 2012; Rice, Neimeyer, & Taylor, 2011) and has recently been studied in health psychology topics, exploring subjective meaning and internal voices in teenage patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (Fuchs et al, 2013; van Geelen, 2010). The present article adopts the assumption that in dealing with non-adherent or resistant behavior, the first order of business is to understand how that behavior is coherent, adaptive, or valid for the patient, in a certain context or with a certain internal voice.…”
Section: How To Deal With Patients’ Non-adherence?mentioning
confidence: 99%