The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention

Portfolio Abstract Burns injuries can affect both adults and children. They can cause severe and enduring physical and psychological consequences, for both the individual and their family. Changes to appearance are a fundamental part of a burn injury. Medical tattooing (MT) is an intervention desig...

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Main Authors: Tyerman, Catherine, Shepherd, Laura, De Boos, Danielle, Tickle, Anna
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
English
English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/
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author Tyerman, Catherine
Shepherd, Laura
De Boos, Danielle
Tickle, Anna
author_facet Tyerman, Catherine
Shepherd, Laura
De Boos, Danielle
Tickle, Anna
author_sort Tyerman, Catherine
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Portfolio Abstract Burns injuries can affect both adults and children. They can cause severe and enduring physical and psychological consequences, for both the individual and their family. Changes to appearance are a fundamental part of a burn injury. Medical tattooing (MT) is an intervention designed to address appearance/body dissatisfaction. Systematic Review: a systematic search was completed of five electronic databases (CINAHL, Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBOSE and PsycINFO), reference lists and ‘cited by’ referencing sources to identify and evaluate all published qualitative research literature on the psychological experiences of parents of children who have experienced burn injuries. Seven studies met the selection criteria and four themes were identified: ‘the trauma of witnessing a family member’s burn injury’, ‘the ‘mixed blessing’ of hospitalisation’, ‘attempting to return to ‘normal’ life -adapting to new roles’, and ‘guilt and blame: core issues’. The results suggest parents experience three phases of recovery following a child’s burn, all impacted on by feelings of guilt and blame. Journal Article: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) was applied to eight in-depth interviews with burn survivors with medical tattoos. Three themes were extracted: Management of Hope, The Process and Impacts of MT: ‘Normal-ish is Fantastic’ which were set within a context of ‘Conflict about Legitimacy’. The findings suggest MT may facilitate a regained sense of normality and an improved sense of being acceptable in society. However, a potential paradox was identified between a pressure to conform to certain expectations of appearance and a sense that a desire to meet these expectations is also not viewed as important or acceptable. By understanding these experiences, healthcare professionals can increase awareness of the lived experienced of individuals with burn injuries and of those around them. It also demonstrates that MT is a potentially valuable intervention. Further research needs are highlighted.
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language English
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English
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spelling nottingham-646612025-02-28T15:11:26Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/ The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention Tyerman, Catherine Shepherd, Laura De Boos, Danielle Tickle, Anna Portfolio Abstract Burns injuries can affect both adults and children. They can cause severe and enduring physical and psychological consequences, for both the individual and their family. Changes to appearance are a fundamental part of a burn injury. Medical tattooing (MT) is an intervention designed to address appearance/body dissatisfaction. Systematic Review: a systematic search was completed of five electronic databases (CINAHL, Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, EMBOSE and PsycINFO), reference lists and ‘cited by’ referencing sources to identify and evaluate all published qualitative research literature on the psychological experiences of parents of children who have experienced burn injuries. Seven studies met the selection criteria and four themes were identified: ‘the trauma of witnessing a family member’s burn injury’, ‘the ‘mixed blessing’ of hospitalisation’, ‘attempting to return to ‘normal’ life -adapting to new roles’, and ‘guilt and blame: core issues’. The results suggest parents experience three phases of recovery following a child’s burn, all impacted on by feelings of guilt and blame. Journal Article: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) was applied to eight in-depth interviews with burn survivors with medical tattoos. Three themes were extracted: Management of Hope, The Process and Impacts of MT: ‘Normal-ish is Fantastic’ which were set within a context of ‘Conflict about Legitimacy’. The findings suggest MT may facilitate a regained sense of normality and an improved sense of being acceptable in society. However, a potential paradox was identified between a pressure to conform to certain expectations of appearance and a sense that a desire to meet these expectations is also not viewed as important or acceptable. By understanding these experiences, healthcare professionals can increase awareness of the lived experienced of individuals with burn injuries and of those around them. It also demonstrates that MT is a potentially valuable intervention. Further research needs are highlighted. 2021-08-04 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/1/DCP_1516_V1_4263851_081172901.pdf application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/2/DCP_1516_V2_4263851_081172901.pdf application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/3/DCP_1516_SSRI_4263851_081172901.pdf application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/4/DCP_1516_Poster_4263851_081172901.pdf Tyerman, Catherine, Shepherd, Laura, De Boos, Danielle and Tickle, Anna (2021) The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention. DClinPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Burns medical tattooing body image disfigurement
spellingShingle Burns
medical tattooing
body image
disfigurement
Tyerman, Catherine
Shepherd, Laura
De Boos, Danielle
Tickle, Anna
The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title_full The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title_fullStr The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title_full_unstemmed The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title_short The impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
title_sort impacts of the visible differences in appearance caused by burn injuries, and medical tattooing as an appearance-based intervention
topic Burns
medical tattooing
body image
disfigurement
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/64661/