Understanding Gut Feelings: Transformations in Coping With Inflammatory Bowel Disease Among Young Adults

Author:

Gelech Jan1ORCID,Desjardins Michel1,Mazurik Kathrina1,Duerksen Kari2,McGuigan-Scott Kevin1,Lichtenwald Kristy1

Affiliation:

1. University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

2. University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Past studies have revealed a dizzying array of coping techniques employed by persons living with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Unfortunately, research has provided little insight into when and why individuals adopt or abandon particular coping strategies. Using a retrospective narrative approach, we explored how participants made sense of changes in their approach to coping over time. Shifts in coping strategies were associated with particular illness experiences that wrought new understandings of IBD and novel identity challenges. They followed a common processual form and were marked by a movement away from techniques of purification, normalization, and banalization toward the development of a more communicative body. This was accompanied by notable shifts in identity work. Notably, participants moved from a preoccupation with maintaining continuity and sameness to permitting their extraordinary bodies to occupy a place in their public and personal identities. Implications of this process for theory and practice are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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