Literature DB >> 20695947

Latching onto life: living in the area of tension between the possibility of life and the necessity of death.

Berit Saeteren1, Unni Å Lindström, Dagfinn Nåden.   

Abstract

AIM: To present one of the findings from a large-scale hermeneutic research project focusing on promoting a deeper understanding of health and suffering because of serious cancer disease.
BACKGROUND: Although suffering is a main concern for caring science, there is limited research focusing on the suffering of the patients with a serious cancer disease from the patients' perspective and few studies focusing on the patient's health resources and the dialectic between these.
DESIGN: The study has a hermeneutic design inspired by Gadamer's ontological hermeneutics.
METHOD: Fifteen Norwegian patients with cancer disease were interviewed. They were informed about the seriousness of their situation and that there was no more curative treatment to offer.
RESULTS: The results show that the patients lived their lives in a dialectic oscillation, a struggle between health and suffering. They expressed health through striving towards normal life, aspiring for hope, taking responsibility for their own life and experiencing belongingness with their next of kin. Suffering was expressed through experiences of bodily aversion, uncertainty and fear of the future, sorrow and needs, anxiety, despair and loneliness. The patients were lonely in this struggle, as conversations about existence and death did not occur, neither with the nurses nor with their next of kin. Death remained veiled in silence.
CONCLUSIONS: In confronting one's own death, there seems to be striving for health, striving for wholeness and for becoming a self in a life dominated by suffering. Becoming a self implies a desire to be a responsible human being and to experience integrity and dignity in life despite increasing dependency on others. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: There seems to be a great need in clinical practice to give priority to, and increase, the consciousness and competence of nurses to see and respond to the spiritual/existential concerns of patients with a serious cancer disease.
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 20695947     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2010.03212.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Nurs        ISSN: 0962-1067            Impact factor:   3.036


  9 in total

1.  Measuring health-related quality of life in patients with advanced cancer: a systematic review of self-administered measurement instruments.

Authors:  Janneke van Roij; Heidi Fransen; Lonneke van de Poll-Franse; Myrte Zijlstra; Natasja Raijmakers
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2018-02-10       Impact factor: 4.147

2.  A concept analysis of the existential experience of adults with advanced cancer.

Authors:  Elise C Tarbi; Salimah H Meghani
Journal:  Nurs Outlook       Date:  2019-03-27       Impact factor: 3.250

3.  Phase 1 clinical trials in end-stage cancer: patient understanding of trial premises and motives for participation.

Authors:  Tove Godskesen; Peter Nygren; Karin Nordin; Mats Hansson; Ulrik Kihlbom
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2013-07-18       Impact factor: 3.603

4.  The pendulum time of life: the experience of time, when living with severe incurable disease--a phenomenological and philosophical study.

Authors:  Sidsel Ellingsen; Åsa Roxberg; Kjell Kristoffersen; Jan Henrik Rosland; Herdis Alvsvåg
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2015-05

5.  "If it's the time, it's the time": Existential communication in naturally-occurring palliative care conversations with individuals with advanced cancer, their families, and clinicians.

Authors:  Elise C Tarbi; Robert Gramling; Christine Bradway; Salimah H Meghani
Journal:  Patient Educ Couns       Date:  2021-05-10

6.  Opportunities for Poetic Analysis in Qualitative Nursing Research.

Authors:  Elise C Tarbi; Brianna Morgan
Journal:  Nurs Res       Date:  2022-01-24       Impact factor: 2.364

7.  Validation of a new instrument for self-assessment of nurses' core competencies in palliative care.

Authors:  Kari Slåtten; Ove Hatlevik; Lisbeth Fagerström
Journal:  Nurs Res Pract       Date:  2014-07-16

8.  Spiritual Well-being in Patients With Metastatic Colorectal Cancer Receiving Noncurative Chemotherapy: A Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Gudrun Rohde; Christian Kersten; Ingvild Vistad; Terje Mesel
Journal:  Cancer Nurs       Date:  2017 May/Jun       Impact factor: 2.592

9.  The meaning of dignity when the patients' bodies are falling apart.

Authors:  Vibeke Bruun Lorentsen; Dagfinn Nåden; Berit Sæteren
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2019-05-22
  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.