Abstract

Despite substantial reorganisation of stroke unit provision in the United Kingdom, limited qualitative research has explored how stroke survivors experience the acute stroke unit. This hermeneutic phenomenological study used accounts from four stroke survivors who experienced one of two acute stroke units. Through detailed analysis, the acute stroke unit emerged as a meaningful space, in two distinct but interconnected forms. As holding space, the unit was understood to offer protection and safe haven, as the stroke survivors looked to cope and respond to the temporal, bodily, biographical disruption and significant vulnerability brought about by stroke and by being in hospital. Holding was fulfilled by different people (including their fellow stroke survivors) and reflected a human response to human need and existential vulnerability. This space, and the practices within it, functioned to hold them intimately but also at a distance from their prestroke lifeworld. As such, the acute stroke unit holding space was intertwined with how it supported, encouraged or provoked transition. In the transitional space of the acute stroke unit, stroke survivors described how they survived the hospital‐healthcare space, stroke unit and poststroke space. This paper articulates how transition was meaningfully signified through its absence or presence, as they transformed, relinquished or re‐asserted their ‘self’, and in one case, recovered whilst ‘in there’. The findings of this study provide phenomenological insight into stroke survivors’ lived experience, the meaningful holding and transitional contribution of the unit, and how these spatial forms were intertwined. These insights are discussed in relation to the existing evidence base and stroke unit provision.

Highlights

  • In the United Kingdom (UK), traditional stroke unit services were closed or restructured into hyperacute1 and/or acute stroke units2

  • This study looked to attend to the subjective, lifeworld of stroke survivors and their meaningful, practical concerns to provide much needed insight and understanding for those working in acute stroke unit settings

  • None of the understanding developed was brought a priori, but emerged through detailed analysis, dialogue and interrogation of the accounts and associated texts. For these four stroke survivors, the acute stroke unit was experienced as a lived space7 in two differentiated but intertwined forms: holding space and transitional space

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Summary

Introduction

In the United Kingdom (UK), traditional stroke unit services were closed or restructured into hyperacute and/or acute stroke units. An acute stroke unit has been described as ‘one that treats patients usually in an intensive model of care with continuous monitoring and nurse staffing levels’ ((1), p8). The shaping and auditing of Present address: Pirjo Vuoskoski, Faculty of Sport and Health Sciences University of Jyv€askyl€a Jyv€askyl€a Finland these services have emphasised medicalisation, technicalisation and objectification. Important, this can obscure the human dimensions of healthcare [2] and that which is less visible [3] and/or quantifiable. Limited work has been undertaken in the UK and describing the type of service is often overlooked

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