| Literature DB >> 25944316 |
Erik Olsman1, Dick Willems2, Carlo Leget3.
Abstract
The ethics of hope has often been understood as a conflict between duties: do not lie versus do not destroy hope. However, such a way of framing the ethics of hope may easily place healthcare professionals at the side of realism and patients at the side of (false) hope. That leaves unexamined relational dimensions of hope. The objective of this study was to describe a relational ethics of hope based on the perspectives of palliative care patients, their family members and their healthcare professionals. A qualitative longitudinal method based on narrative theories was used. Semi-structured interviews on hope were conducted with twenty-nine palliative care patients, nineteen friends or family members, and fifty-two healthcare professionals, which were recorded and transcribed. Data on hope were thematically analyzed. The researchers wrote memos and did member checking with participants. When participants spoke about hope, they referred to power and empowerment, like the powerful bonding of hope between patients and physicians. They also associated hope with the loss of hope and suffering. Several participating healthcare professionals tried to balance both sides, which involved acknowledgment of hope and suffering. Hope and power were reflected in the ethical concept of empowerment, whereas suffering and the loss of hope were reflected in the ethical concept of compassion. Empowerment and compassion can be balanced in solicitude. In conclusion, a relational ethics of hope requires solicitude, in which healthcare professionals are able to weigh empowerment and compassion within particular relationships.Entities:
Keywords: Compassion; Empowerment; Ethics; Hope; Palliative care; Qualitative research; Solicitude
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 25944316 PMCID: PMC4805712 DOI: 10.1007/s11019-015-9642-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Health Care Philos ISSN: 1386-7423
Characteristics of participants (n = 100)
| Patients (n = 29) | Family/friends (n = 19) | Professionals (n = 52) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Range | Mean | SD | Range | Mean | SD | Range | |
| Age | 65.9 | 14.7 | 37–91 | 52.1 | 13.6 | 24–75 | 49.0 | 8.9 | 29–64 |
aChristian, Jewish, Muslim
An example of the code tree: hope and power
| Quotations | Themes | Hope associated with |
|---|---|---|
| “Well, that [church] was like: keep hoping, allow yourself time, be strong and powerful, things like that” (patient 21) | Keep hoping: allow time, be strong, powerful | Power |
| “She was so powerful because of her hope that she didn’t leave any space for saying goodbyes”. (nurse 15) | Powerful because of hope, no space for goodbyes | Power |
| Let’s say: that hope, which people have had, I also think it is a sort of motivator, a sort of power, like: I will go on”. (physician 10) | Hope is motivator, power | Power |
| “Hope is: I wanna stay alive. That will to survive is very strong in human beings, no matter how ill they are. They cling to that” (patient 6) | Hope: strong will to survive | Strong will -> power |
| “Hope also includes a desire and courage as well, you make an inventory of power, and hope also gives power” (physician 12) | Hope includes desire, courage and gives power | Power |
| “Some people [with hope] try to keep themselves on their feet with thoughts like: it’s not as bad as it seems. And: I want to do many things. I also think that we as healthcare professionals sometimes are more negative than patients” (chaplain 10) | Hope keeps people on their feet | Keeping yourself on your feet -> power? |
An example of the code tree: loss of hope and suffering
| Quotations | Themes | Loss of hope/no hope associated with |
|---|---|---|
| Then they’ve lost hope (…) at the point that they say: ‘It’s ready now. I’m done with struggling’”. (nurse 6) | Lost hope: done with struggling | Struggling -> suffering? |
| [During desperate moments I think about:] losing control. That I won’t be any longer who I used to be. I think that’s the word. That I won’t have any control over my body. That you’re pissing, shitting and stinking” (patient 12) | Desperate moments: losing control over body | No control over body and losing yourself -> suffering |
| “First they hope for cure. Then you’ve lost the hope for cure and then you hope to live for another year (…). You may deny it to a certain degree but the disease’s nature is that that won’t work anymore at a certain moment” (physician 7) | Lose hope because of physical suffering | Suffering |
| About her hope, our puzzle is: how do you simultaneously acknowledge her suffering and take things over from her? (nurse 9) | Hope versus suffering | Suffering |
| “We [man with COPD and I] saw each other during coffee, tea (…). He had always played [a wind instrument] in orchestras (…) so that man misses that a lot [pause]. Well, he had fun at that moment [with me]. No hope, but now again he had hope” (patient 29) | No hope because he missed his favorite hobby --> hope again because he had fun | Missing favorite things, no fun -> suffering? |