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Journal Article

Citation

Park SH, Yi CW, Shin JY, Ryu YU. J. Phys. Ther. Sci. 2015; 27(12): 3929-3931.

Affiliation

Department of Physical Therapy, College of Medical Science, Catholic University of Daegu, Republic of Korea.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Society of Physical Therapy Science)

DOI

10.1589/jpts.27.3929

PMID

26834382

PMCID

PMC4713821

Abstract

[Purpose] The present study reviewed studies that examined the effects of attentional focus on balance.

[Methods] Keywords such as "attentional", "focus", and "balance" were used to find relevant research papers in PubMed (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed). Forty-five papers were found, and 18 of them were used for this study, excluding review papers and papers irrelevant to the topic of this study.

[Results] Among the papers used for the review, the number of papers in which external focus produced effective outcomes was 15 (83.3%). The number of papers in which both external and internal focus produced effective outcomes was 2 (11.1%). The number of paper in which no instruction about attentional focus was effective was 1 (5.5%), and the number of papers in which internal focus was effective was zero.

[Conclusion] This short review suggests clinical implications about how physical therapists can use attentional focus for balance rehabilitation of patients. Instructions about external focus of attention can generally be useful as a method to improve posture and balance control. Furthermore, the present reviews indicates that external focus of attention would be more useful in a rehabilitation stage in which the difficulty level of balance performance is gradually increased.


Language: en

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