Broken Machines or Active Bodies? Part 2. How People Talk About Osteoarthritis and Why Clinicians Need to Change the Conversation (Editorial)

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Bunzli, S
Taylor, NF
O'Brien, P
Wallis, JA
Caneiro, JP
Woodward-Kron, R
Hunter, DJ
Choong, PF
Dowsey, MM
Shields, N
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2023
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SYNOPSIS: How people talk about osteoarthritis may impact outcomes, including uptake of guideline recommendations related to activity-based lifestyles and interventions. In this editorial, we describe 2 key ways of talking, based on findings from our systematic review of 62 qualitative studies exploring the perceptions of people with knee osteoarthritis (n = 1208), their carers (n = 28), and clinicians (n = 2403). Among raw quotes extracted from the studies, we observed a dominant impairment-based way of talking and a participatory based way of talking. These ways of talking form a novel framework to help clinicians understand what people think and do about osteoarthritis.

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Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy

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53

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6

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Clinical sciences

Allied health and rehabilitation science

Sports science and exercise

communication

discourse

osteoarthritis

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Bunzli, S; Taylor, NF; O'Brien, P; Wallis, JA; Caneiro, JP; Woodward-Kron, R; Hunter, DJ; Choong, PF; Dowsey, MM; Shields, N, Broken Machines or Active Bodies? Part 2. How People Talk About Osteoarthritis and Why Clinicians Need to Change the Conversation, Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, 2023, 53 (6), pp. 325-330

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