State-Space Grid Analysis: Applications for Clinical Whole Systems Complementary and Alternative Medicine Research
Authors
Amy Howerter
aDepartment of Family and Community Medicine, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
Tom Hollenstein
bDepartment of Psychology, Queen’s University, Kingston
Heather Boon
cLeslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Kathryn Niemeyer
dCollege of Nursing, The University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
David Brule
eRiverdale Homeopathic Clinic, Toronto, ON, Canada
Keywords:
State space grids, Dynamic systems, Interpersonal dynamics, Intrapersonal dynamics, Complementary and alternative medicine, Complex adaptive systems
Abstract
Summary
This paper presents state space grids (SSGs) as a mathematically less intensive methodology for process-oriented research beyond traditional qualitative and quantitative approaches in whole systems of complementary and alternative medicine (WS-CAM). SSGs, originally applied in developmental psychology research, offer a logical, flexible, and accessible tool for capturing emergent changes in the temporal dynamics of patient behaviors, manifestations of resilience, and outcomes. The SSG method generates a two-dimensional visualization and quantification of the inter-relationships between variables on a moment-to-moment basis. SSGs can describe dyadic interactive behavior in real time and, followed longitudinally, allow evaluation of how change occurs over extended time periods. Practice theories of WS-CAM encompass the holistic health concept of whole-person outcomes, including nonlinear pathways to complex, multidimensional changes. Understanding how the patient as a living system arrives at these outcomes requires studying the process of healing, e.g., sudden abrupt worsening and/or improvements, ‘healing crises’, and ‘unstuckness’, from which the multiple inter-personal and intra-personal outcomes emerge. SSGs can document the indirect, emergent dynamic effects of interventions, transitional phases, and the mutual interaction of patient and environment that underlie the healing process. Two WS-CAM research exemplars are provided to demonstrate the feasibility of using SSGs in both dyadic and within-patient contexts, and to illustrate the possibilities for clinically relevant, process-focused hypotheses. This type of research has the potential to help clinicians select, modify and optimize treatment plans earlier in the course of care and produce more successful outcomes for more patients.
Keywords: State space grids, Dynamic systems, Interpersonal dynamics, Intrapersonal dynamics, Complementary and alternative medicine, Complex adaptive systems
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