2021
DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2021.1964713
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Denying and Accepting a Family Member’s Illness: Uncertainty Management as a Process

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…As a result, this study offers further avenues to explore narrative-based resilience scholarship in the face of disruptive life events (Betts et al, 2022), like chronic illness (Venetis et al, 2020). Finally, this study contributes to a growing body of communication scholarship on autoimmune disease (Castle & Koenig Kellas, 2019; Gunning, 2022; Thompson, Pulido, et al, 2022) and dismissive and disenfranchising experiences for individuals with chronic illness and pain (Gunning & Taladay-Carter, 2023; Hildenbrand et al, 2022; Hintz & Tucker, 2023), notably women (Hintz, 2022; Thompson, Babu, & Makos, 2022, 2023).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…As a result, this study offers further avenues to explore narrative-based resilience scholarship in the face of disruptive life events (Betts et al, 2022), like chronic illness (Venetis et al, 2020). Finally, this study contributes to a growing body of communication scholarship on autoimmune disease (Castle & Koenig Kellas, 2019; Gunning, 2022; Thompson, Pulido, et al, 2022) and dismissive and disenfranchising experiences for individuals with chronic illness and pain (Gunning & Taladay-Carter, 2023; Hildenbrand et al, 2022; Hintz & Tucker, 2023), notably women (Hintz, 2022; Thompson, Babu, & Makos, 2022, 2023).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…This experience of contestation is exacerbated for women and patients who were assigned female at birth due to historic ideologies of the hysterical female patient that positioned AD as a psychiatric disorder (Hintz, 2022; Thompson, Babu, & Makos, 2022). As a result, many women spend years seeking validation, diagnosis, and treatment for their (often invisible) symptoms (Thompson et al, 2023). When a patients’ illness narrative and biomedical markers of disease (e.g., blood tests, x-rays) are not aligned, their story is more likely to be dismissed (Japp & Japp, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ToMM framework has been used similarly by Droser & Seurer (2022) to identify the appropriate words to say to a loved one experiencing grief and loss. Additionally, these findings build upon Thompson & Duerringer's (2020) and Thompson et al's (2021) research on invalidation and contestation of illness by family members by providing supportive and belief-centered messages that family members can communicate to the member with illness, amidst their doubt and uncertainty. Research that seeks to eradicate blatant contestation and develop support language for situations of unknown chronic illness and pain can guide patient-practitioner communication and collaboration toward quality-of-life treatment and care.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…When family members were deceased, interviewees expressed guilt and remorse in ways that suggest that their identity gap management remains incomplete. At the same time, such realizations may necessitate extended time horizons, as identity negotiation amidst illness uncertainty is influenced by other processes, including individual development and illness progression, that can vary and intersect in complex ways (Brashers et al, 2000; Miller & Caughlin, 2013; Thompson et al, 2021).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As part of a larger project on evolving uncertainty about a family member’s health issues (e.g., Thompson et al, 2021), two authors conducted semi-structured interviews with 33 adults living in the U.S. about “a family member whose health you doubted, but now believe” (as stated in the study advertisement). Interviewees were ranged from age 26 to 70 ( M = 39.85, SD = 11.33), and 51.5% identified as male and 48.5% as female.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%