| Literature DB >> 24567991 |
Rinat Nissim1, David Rennie2, Stephen Fleming2, Sarah Hales3, Lucia Gagliese4, Gary Rodin3.
Abstract
A longitudinal qualitative research study was undertaken to provide an understanding of a prolonged experience of advanced cancer, as seen through the eyes of dying individuals. Using a variant of the grounded theory method, the authors theoretically sampled, from outpatient clinics in a large comprehensive cancer treatment center, 27 patients with either advanced lung or gastrointestinal cancer who had an expected survival of up to 2 years. The authors conducted a total of 54 interviews with these patients to learn of their experience of advanced cancer. The authors represent their experience with the core category: striving to grow in the land of the living/dying, symbolizing their sense of finding themselves in a borderland between life and death where their efforts focused on 3 common goals. controlling dying, valuing life in the present, and creating a living legacy. They provide a longitudinal account of how these goals were addressed throughout the illness trajectory and discuss the theoretical and clinical implications of this understanding for the experience of dying from advanced cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 24567991 DOI: 10.1080/07481187.2011.553324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Death Stud ISSN: 0748-1187