TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Psychosocial Aspects of Rehabilitation A1 - Granquist, Megan D. A1 - Brewer, Britton W. A2 - Granquist, Megan D. A2 - Hamson-Utley, Jennifer Jordan A2 - Kenow, Laura J. A2 - Stiller-Ostrowski, Jennifer PY - 2015 T2 - Psychosocial Strategies for Athletic Training AB - KEY TERMSAthletic identity The degree to which a person identifies the self as an athlete.Autonomy A sense of choice or control over one's actions and behaviors.Biopsychosocial perspective The view that biological, psychological (e.g., thoughts, emotions, behaviors), and social factors all play a significant role in human functioning in the context of disease or illness.Cognitive appraisal Interpretation of a situation.Compliance An individual completing a required behavior.Macrotrauma Injury resulting from a single impact or force that creates tissue damage (e.g., fracture, sprain, or dislocation).Microtrauma Injury resulting from repeated smaller forces that gradually result in tissue damage over time (e.g., stress fracture, tendinitis).Pain-spasm cycle Pain that causes vasoconstriction and muscle spasm, which, in turn, causes more pain, which, in turn, exacerbates the cycle; sometimes referred to as the pain-spasm-pain cycle.Rapport The harmonious or synchronous relationship of two or more people who relate well to each other.Rehabilitation adherence Behaviors an athlete demonstrates by pursuing a course of action that coincides with the recommendations of the athletic trainer and is aimed at recovery from injury.Rehabilitation antecedents Biopsychosocial factors (injury characteristics, biological factors, psychological factors, sociodemographic factors, social/contextual factors) that influence rehabilitation adherence and outcomes.Rehabilitation nonadherence The athlete working either too little (i.e., underadherence) or too much (i.e., overadherence) based on recommendations of the athletic trainer.Rehabilitation outcomes Results of rehabilitation; examples include, but are not limited to, functional ability, strength, range of motion, readiness to return to sport, treatment satisfaction, quality of life.Rehabilitation overadherence The athlete doing more than the rehabilitation program calls for.Rehabilitation underadherence The athlete doing less than the rehabilitation program calls for.Self-efficacy Confidence in one's ability to perform a particular task in a specific situation. SN - PB - F. A. Davis Company CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2024/03/29 UR - fadavisat.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1162711598 ER -