2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-015-1169-2
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Time and chronic illness: a narrative review

Abstract: Chronic illness induces new relationships to time. Drawing on Hyden (Sociol Health Illn 19(1):48-69, 1997), it is suggested that "narrative" storytelling--as a temporally informed analytic device---might prove effective for reconciling the tensions emergent from new and multiple relationships to time that chronic and multiple illnesses create. Opportunities exist for healthcare practitioners and health services to offer patients illness support that is cognisant of their relationships to time.

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Cited by 31 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…A similar pattern is found in the context of ill health. For example, Jowsey's () literature review of time in chronic illness identifies multiple, relational, and embodied temporalities. And as we discuss below, in critical‐theory‐oriented research, there is also a small body of work suggesting that multiple temporalities are evident in people's experiences of health that do not map onto the simple linear temporalities or absences in health promotion outlined above.…”
Section: Time In Health and Lifestyle Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A similar pattern is found in the context of ill health. For example, Jowsey's () literature review of time in chronic illness identifies multiple, relational, and embodied temporalities. And as we discuss below, in critical‐theory‐oriented research, there is also a small body of work suggesting that multiple temporalities are evident in people's experiences of health that do not map onto the simple linear temporalities or absences in health promotion outlined above.…”
Section: Time In Health and Lifestyle Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Events open up rather than close down possibilities, as the virtual is actualised in processes of becoming, producing new virtualities that increase the potential for further, novel actualisations. This novelty “is what time is if anything at all: not simply mechanical repetition, the causal effects of objects on objects, but the indeterminate, the unfolding, the emergence of the new” (Grosz, , p. 230), troubling the certainty of health promotion's linear predictions (Adams et al, ) and accounting for experiences of multiple, embodied temporalities of health (Jowsey, ; Stronge, ).…”
Section: Towards a Critical Theory Of Timementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This might mean that illnesses impact on experiences of time in multiple ways. This is an important factor that cannot be advanced in whole in this paper but is attended to elsewhere (see Jowsey ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 90%
“…The past, present and future of those who were experiencing SCD were therefore defined and redefined as the experience evolved (Brown, 1995 Indeed, the conceptualisation of disruption is strongly reflected in the above data. While an argued value of the concept is in providing the basis for moving from disruption to an interrelated sense of past, present and future (Jowsey, 2016), the challenge of rewriting one's past in order to understand the present and future of SCD was not simply an issue of greater awareness. What the future held for the carer participants may have been pre-ordained by fate but in the unfolding reality became a temporal space of contradiction and uncertainty.…”
Section: )mentioning
confidence: 99%