%0 Journal Article %T Tai Chi for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain: A Pilot Study %A Cheralyn H. Powers %A G. Andrew James %A J. Vincent Roca %A Jason Y. Chang %A Pao-Feng Tsai %A Patricia Dubbert %A Stephanie Kitch %J Journal of Holistic Nursing %@ 1552-5724 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0898010117697617 %X Purpose: Explore the feasibility of a Tai Chi intervention to improve musculoskeletal pain, emotion, cognition, and physical function in individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder. Design: Two-phase, one-arm quasi-experimental design. Method:Phase 1: 11 participants completed one Tai Chi session, feasibility questionnaire, and were offered participation in Phase 2, a 12-week Tai Chi intervention. Ten participants participated in Phase 2. Pain intensity, interference, physical function scales, an emotional battery, and cognition tests were used for pre- and postintervention outcome measures. Paired t tests and thematic analysis were used for analysis. Findings: In Phase 1, most felt Tai Chi would benefit health (90.9%) and expressed interest in continuing Tai Chi (6.73 out of 7). Phase 2 results showed improvement in fear-affect (raw t = £¿2.64, p = .03; age adjusted t = £¿2.90, p = .02), fear¨Csomatic arousal (raw t = £¿2.53, p = .035), List Sorting Working Memory (raw t = 2.62, p = .031; age adjusted t = 2.96, p = .018), 6-Minute Walk Test (t = 3.541, p = .008), and current level of Pain Intensity (t = £¿4.00, p = .004). Conclusions: Tai Chi is an acceptable, holistic treatment to individuals with musculoskeletal pain and posttraumatic stress disorder. It may reduce pain, improve emotion, memory, and physical function %K pain and pain management %K psychosocial/mental health %K trauma/posttrauma %K Tai Chi %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0898010117697617