The role of psychological flexibility in injury rehabilitation
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-1-2016
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore the influence of psychosocial factors and psychological flexibility on rehabilitation protocol adherence in a sample of injured collegiate athletes. Self-report measures were given to injured athletes before the start of a physical rehabilitation protocol. Upon completion of rehabilitation, each athlete was assessed by the chief athletic trainer using a measure of rehabilitation adherence. Correlational analyses and bootstrapped logistic regression analyses were conducted to determine whether broad psychosocial factors and level of psychological flexibility predicted engagement and adherence to a rehabilitation protocol. Psychological flexibility, as measured on the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (2nd ed.; Bond et al., 2011), contributed significantly to the overall logistic regression model. Study findings suggested that assessment of psychological flexibility could give medical providers a way to evaluate both quickly and quantitatively potentially problematic behavioral responding among injured athletes, allowing for more effective adherence monitoring.
Publication Title
Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
First Page Number
192
Last Page Number
205
DOI
10.1123/jcsp.2014-0023
Recommended Citation
DeGaetano, Jessica J.; Wolanin, Andrew T.; Marks, Donald R.; and Eastin, Shiloh M., "The role of psychological flexibility in injury rehabilitation" (2016). Kean Publications. 1714.
https://digitalcommons.kean.edu/keanpublications/1714