Alison Kate Lillie1. 1. School of Health Science, University of Birmingham, 52 Pritchatts Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK. a.k.lillie@bham.ac.uk
Abstract
AIM: To understand why healthcare professionals working in palliative care felt that pilgrimage to Lourdes could be a beneficial activity for the terminally ill. DESIGN: A qualitative study using a phenomenological framework. METHODS: Nine semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of hospice staff. RESULTS: The reasons given for accompanying the terminally ill to Lourdes reflected the general aims of palliative care. They included improving the quality of life through the provision of a holiday, maintaining patient choice and autonomy and enabling inner-transformations. The communitas, or altered relationships, formed during the pilgrimage were also seen as beneficial.
AIM: To understand why healthcare professionals working in palliative care felt that pilgrimage to Lourdes could be a beneficial activity for the terminally ill. DESIGN: A qualitative study using a phenomenological framework. METHODS: Nine semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of hospice staff. RESULTS: The reasons given for accompanying the terminally ill to Lourdes reflected the general aims of palliative care. They included improving the quality of life through the provision of a holiday, maintaining patient choice and autonomy and enabling inner-transformations. The communitas, or altered relationships, formed during the pilgrimage were also seen as beneficial.