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Journal Article

Citation

Fleming J, Braithwaite H, Gustafsson L, Griffin J, Collier AM, Fletcher S. Brain Inj. 2011; 25(9): 806-818.

Affiliation

The University of Queensland, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences , St Lucia, Brisbane, Queensland , Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699052.2011.585508

PMID

21631189

Abstract

Primary objective: To describe and compare pre- and post-injury leisure activities of individuals receiving brain injury rehabilitation and explore levels of leisure participation and satisfaction. Research design: Cross-sectional descriptive study incorporating a survey of current and past leisure activities. Methods and procedures: Questionnaires were completed by 40 individuals with an acquired brain injury receiving inpatient or outpatient rehabilitation. Measures: Shortened Version of the Nottingham Leisure Questionnaire and Changes in Leisure Questionnaire (developed for this study). Results: Leisure participation declined following injury, particularly in social leisure activities. Pre-injury activities with high rates of discontinued or decreased participation were driving, going to pubs and parties, do-it-yourself activities and attending sports events. Inpatient participants generally attributed decreased participation to the hospital environment, whereas outpatient participants reported this predominantly as a result of disability. Post-injury levels of perceived leisure satisfaction were significantly lower for the inpatient group compared to pre-injury, but not for the outpatient group. Uptake of some new leisure activities was reported post-injury, however not at the rate to which participation declined. Conclusions: Leisure participation decreases during brain injury rehabilitation compared to pre-injury levels. Re-engagement in relevant, age-appropriate leisure activities needs to be addressed during rehabilitation to improve participation in this domain.


Language: en

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