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Journal Article

Citation

Abreu BC, Seale G, Scheibel RS, Huddleston N, Zhang L, Ottenbacher KJ. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil. 2001; 82(1): 49-56.

Affiliation

Transitional Learning Center, Galveston, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1053/apmr.2001.9167

PMID

11239286

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine self-awareness regarding performance on 4 daily living tasks and to test theoretical predictions for a model of self-awareness in persons with acquired brain injury. DESIGN: A comparative design examining the level of self-awareness recorded by patients and actual patient performance as judged by rehabilitation clinicians. SETTING: A community-based residential center providing comprehensive rehabilitation services to persons with acquired brain injury. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-five persons with acquired brain injury and the identified potential to return to independent function in the community. Ten subjects without brain injury provided comparison data. INTERVENTION: Information was collected by using patient self-report, clinician rating of patient performance, patient rating of non-brain-injured subjects, and clinician rating of non-brain-injured subjects. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Three self-awareness criteria were examined: intellectual, emergent, and anticipatory. Self-awareness was rated for 3 tasks: dressing, meal planning, and money management. RESULTS: Statistically significant differences (p <.05) were found for all levels of self-awareness across the 3 tasks. Persons with brain injury judged their abilities higher than clinician ratings of actual performance. No statistical support was found for a hierarchy among intellectual, emergent, and anticipatory self-awareness. CONCLUSIONS: No evidence was found supporting a hierarchy among levels of self-awareness as defined and measured in the present study. New methods for operationally defining intellectual, emergent, and anticipatory self-awareness are necessary to examine the relationship between self-awareness and performance.


Language: en

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