| Literature DB >> 24800068 |
Carina Persson1, Eva Benzein1.
Abstract
Research shows that living with illness can be a distressing experience for the family and may result in suffering and reduced health. To meet families' needs, family systems intervention models are developed and employed in clinical contexts. For successful refinement and implementation it is important to understand how these models work. The aim of this study was therefore to describe the dialogue process and possible working mechanisms of one systems nursing intervention model, the Family Health Conversation model. A descriptive evaluation design was applied and 15 transcribed conversations with five families were analyzed within a hermeneutic tradition. Two types of interrelated dialogue events were identified: narrating and exploring. There was a flow between these events, a movement that was generated by the interaction between the participants. Our theoretically grounded interpretation showed that narrating, listening, and reconsidering in interaction may be understood as supporting family health by offering the families the opportunity to constitute self-identity and identity within the family, increasing the families' understanding of multiple ways of being and acting, to see new possibilities and to develop meaning and hope. Results from this study may hopefully contribute to the successful implementation of family systems interventions in education and clinical praxis.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24800068 PMCID: PMC3995177 DOI: 10.1155/2014/547160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Characteristics of the families (n = 5).
| Type of illness ( | |
| Stroke | 2 |
| Parkinson's disease | 2 |
| Dementia | 1 |
| Members participating in the conversations ( | |
| Husband and wife | 3 |
| Husband, wife, and children | 2 |
| Time since onset of illness (months) | 2–60 |
| Family member with illness | |
| Female ( | 3 |
| Male ( | 2 |
| Age (range) | 40–65 |
| Employed ( | 5 |
| Sick-leave ( | 1 |
| Retired ( | 0 |
| Other participating family members | |
| Female ( | 4 |
| Male ( | 5 |
| Age (range) | 7–65 |
| Referral to FamHC ( | |
| Self-referred | 3 |
| Participants in one research study | 2 |
One example of the analysis process of a narrating event.
|
| ||
|---|---|---|
| Text segment |
|
|
| Woman with illness: I can feel miserable, really low…. because we talk about my illness and my situation but the ones that are close to you…they can of course feel just as miserable…living together with a person that is like a wreck | The woman with illness initiates a new issue that is bothering her. | The event is similar to other events in that a new issue is introduced by a family member following an exploring event. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader A: mm | The conversational leader A is mm-ing | The event is similar to other events in that one of the conversational leaders is mm-ing when a narrating event is introduced by a family member. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: and I think, I think the ones that are next to you and are healthy they have a hell. It's just that…I can feel sorry for my husband, I can feel sorry for everybody that is next to a person with this illness | The woman with illness reflects over the same issue | The event is similar to other events in that the family member who introduces the narrating event goes on reflecting on the same issue. Standpoints and feelings are expressed. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader A: mm | The conversational leader A continues to mm-ing | The event is similar to other events in that the conversational leaders only make short comments. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: nobody asks him: how are you? Are you ok today? Are you happy today? No one asks… he is healthy, yes he is. And that is great… but he is also a human being | The woman with illness goes on reflecting over the same issue | The event is similar to other events in that the family member who introduces the narrating event goes on reflecting on the same issue. Standpoints and feelings are further expressed. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader A: mm, but I think that you (turns to the male partner) have expressed how you experience your wife's illness and that the illness have a considerable impact on your situation | The conversational leader A offers her reflection on the issue to the male partner. Her reflection is grounded in what the partner has previously narrated | The event is similar to other events in that one of the conversational leaders turns to other family members to get hold of their standpoints and experiences. |
|
| ||
| Male partner: yes | The partner agrees with the conversational leader A | The event is similar to other events in that the family member that is invited takes the opportunity and gives his/her response. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: yes, it does, I can…I can feel, it must be a burden | The woman with illness agrees | The event is similar to other events in that the family member initiating the narrating event continues to be active and responds to the other family members' statements and reflections. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader B: mm | The conversational leader B enter into the episode and is mm-ing | The event is similar to other events in that the conversational leaders takes turns in mm-ing. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: it is a heavy burden, I hate this illness. Why I, why him, why we? | The woman with illness goes on reflecting and also introduces a related issue by posing questions | The event is similar to other events in that the family member who initiates the narrating event continues to be active and goes on expanding his/her reflection. |
|
| ||
| Male partner: yes but, you can't think of that. It want take you nowhere. It is like it is… | The partner answers with an opposing statement | The event is similar to other events in that another family member enters the conversation and adds his/her standpoints. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: no, it want take you anywhere | The woman with illness agrees with her partner | The event is similar to other events in that family members respond to other family members' statements or reflections. |
|
| ||
| Male partner: the question is, how can you do the best of this situation | The partner poses a question in agreement with what he said earlier | The event is similar to other events in that family members continue to reflect on the standpoint they brought up. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader B: yes | Conversational leader B agrees | The event is similar to other events in that the conversational leader only makes a short statement. |
|
| ||
| Woman with illness: yes, the best is to try to understand…I understand you and you understand me. There is no other way to do it. | The woman with illness suggests how to handle the issue in line with her partner's suggestion and comes to a conclusion | The event is similar to other events in that the initiating family member continues to reflect and comes up with a “solution”. |
|
| ||
| Conversational leader B: in what way do you try to understand each other? | The conversational leader B poses an exploring question | The event is similar to other events in that either of the conversational leaders poses a question that opens up for an exploration of the issue brought up by the family. |
|
| ||
|
| ||
Example of one narrating and exploring event in one Family Health Conversation.
| Event | |
|---|---|
| Narrating | CA: Is there something that you would like to bring up in the conversation today? |
| Primary narrator: Yes, people invite you to their homes and you wish to go | |
| Conversational leader A: mm | |
| Primary narrator: and you think that you have to be there in time, but this illness… | |
| Conversational leader B: mm | |
| PN: you can start in the morning and make plans for the rest of the day and at evening, you have done nothing | |
| CB: mm | |
| PN: you are not able to finish it | |
| SN: it's terribly hard for example, if I start to remind you at eleven o'clock that we are supposed to be ready at three | |
| CA: mm | |
| SN: we will not make it to three anyhow | |
| CA: no | |
| PN: you can, you think, today I will do that and that | |
| SN: then she finds out other things to do instead of focusing on what needs to be done. So I say, only do what you should and nothing else. And it doesn't work | |
|
| |
| Exploring | CB: has it always been like this? |
| PN: no | |
| CB: is it something that has appeared now? | |
| PN: yes, before, I managed to do everything | |
| CB: yes, but you have always had many things going on simultaneously? | |
| PN: yes of course, I used to have many things going on simultaneously but suddenly... Now days, when I wish to do something then, I just do it. But I don't get more than halfway and it looks like a total mess but you are supposed to be on your way somewhere. And you got so tired just thinking about it. You become exhausted, thinking about your failures all the time | |
| CA: yes, do you demand too much of yourself? | |
| PN: yes… I don't know | |
| CA: that you should be able to do as many things as before? | |
| PN: yes I think so, you can't but you do that…you can't but I do | |
| SN: yes and that becomes distressing. And she has, at times…sometimes she is blocked, she can't move, and sometimes she becomes hyperactive with tremor and twitching | |
| PN: yes, maybe I should, just as you say, accept everything | |
CA/B: conversational leader A/B; PN: primary narrator; SN: secondary narrator.
Categorization, characteristics, and examples of questions asked by conversational leaders in the exploring episodes.
| Type of questions | Characteristics | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| “Comparative questions” | Focus on exploring change related to situation, function, behavior, feelings, and thoughts and on comparisons and differentiation of various experiences. | In what way do you think that it has changed? |
|
| ||
| “Analyzing questions” | Focus on exploring how interactions, situations, experiences, beliefs, changes, needs, behavior, and reactions manifested themselves and how they were understood and experienced. | How/what do you think then? |
|
| ||
| “Connecting questions” | Focus on exploring the link between two phenomena expressed in the narration not previously connected. Experiences were linked to beliefs or the illness situation. Changes in emotions or behaviors were linked to changes in illness experiences. | Do you think that … makes a difference to …? |
|
| ||
| “Concluding statement questions” | Comprised conclusions of what had previously been explored and expressed, now reformulated as a question to the family. | So it was … (conclusion)? |
|
| ||
| “Interpretive questions” | Comprised nurses' interpretations of meanings grounded in what had been narrated and now presented to the family in the form of a question. | Do you feel that … (interpretation)? |
Figure 1Family Health Conversations illustrated as a spiral movement towards family health.