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  • Title: Expressing health experience through embodied language.
    Author: Liehr P, Takahashi R, Nishimura C, Frazier L, Kuwajima I, Pennebaker JW.
    Journal: J Nurs Scholarsh; 2002; 34(1):27-32. PubMed ID: 11901964.
    Abstract:
    PURPOSE: To describe embodied language for Japanese elders who suffered a stroke or cardiac disease within the previous year. Embodied language is the overlap of feeling and temporal word use with blood pressure during descriptions of health experience. DESIGN: Exploratory. METHODS: Blood pressure and word use were recorded simultaneously when 17 cardiac and 20 stroke participants described their health experiences for 4 minutes. Blood pressure was measured using a tonometric monitor and word use was measured using linguistic analysis software. Descriptive and nonparametric statistics were used. FINDINGS: Participants with strokes retained higher blood pressure after talking than did cardiac participants. The two groups showed contrasting relationships between word use and blood pressure, particularly for temporal words. CONCLUSIONS: This collaborative research between Japanese and American colleagues was a step toward deciphering shared values, which are important to understanding health for people who have lived through life-changing illness events.
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