Literature DB >> 28827063

Beyond Simple Planning: Existential Dimensions of Conversations With Patients at Risk of Dying From Heart Failure.

Valerie Marie Schulz1, Allison M Crombeen2, Denise Marshall3, Joshua Shadd3, Kori A LaDonna4, Lorelei Lingard5.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Despite the recent promotion of communication guides to improve decision making with patients nearing the end of their lives, these conversations remain challenging. Deeper and more comprehensive understanding of communication barriers that undermine discussions and decisions with patients at risk of dying from heart failure (HF) is vital for informing communication in health care.
OBJECTIVES: To explore experiences and perspectives of patients with advanced HF, their caregivers, and providers, regarding conversations for patients at risk of dying from HF.
METHODS: Following Research Ethics Board approval, index patients with advanced HF (New York Heart Association III or IV) and consenting patient-identified care team members were interviewed. A team sampling unit was formed when the patient plus at least two additional team members participated in interviews. Team members included health professionals (e.g., cardiologist, family physician, HF nurse practitioner, social worker, and specialists, such as respirologist, nephrologist, palliative care physician), family caregivers (e.g., daughter, spouse, roommate, close friend), and community members (e.g., minister, neighbor, regular taxi driver). Our data set included 209 individual interviews clustered into 50 team sampling units at five sites from three Canadian provinces. Key informants, identified as practicing experts in the field, reviewed our initial findings with attention to relevance to practice as a form of triangulation. Iterative data collection and analysis followed constructivist grounded theory procedures with sensitizing concepts drawn from complexity theory. To ensure confidentiality, all participants were given a pseudonym.
RESULTS: Participants' reports of their perceptions and experiences of conversations related to death and dying suggested two main dimensions of such conversations: instrumental and existential. Instrumental dimensions included how these conversations were planned and operationalized as well as the triggers and barriers to these discussions. Existential dimensions of these conversations included evasive maneuvers, powerful emotions, and the phenomenon of death without dying. Existential dimensions appeared to have a basis in issues of mortality and could strongly influence conversations related to death and dying.
CONCLUSION: Conversations for patients at risk of dying from HF have both instrumental and existential dimensions, in which routines and relationships are inseparable. Our current focus on the instrumental aspects of these conversations is necessary but insufficient. The existential dimensions of conversations related to death are profound and may explain why these conversations have struggled to achieve their desired effect. To improve this communication, we need to also attend to existential dimensions, particularly in terms of their impact on the occurrence of these conversations, the nature of relationships and responses within these conversations, and the fluidity of meaning within these conversations.
Copyright © 2017 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Death and dying conversations; emotion; end-of-life conversations for heart failure; existential; mortality salience

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28827063      PMCID: PMC5651176          DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.07.041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage        ISSN: 0885-3924            Impact factor:   3.612


  30 in total

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7.  How do Australian palliative care nurses address existential and spiritual concerns? Facilitators, barriers and strategies.

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8.  Barriers to goals of care discussions with seriously ill hospitalized patients and their families: a multicenter survey of clinicians.

Authors:  John J You; James Downar; Robert A Fowler; François Lamontagne; Irene W Y Ma; Dev Jayaraman; Jennifer Kryworuchko; Patricia H Strachan; Roy Ilan; Aman P Nijjar; John Neary; John Shik; Kevin Brazil; Amen Patel; Kim Wiebe; Martin Albert; Anita Palepu; Elysée Nouvet; Amanda Roze des Ordons; Nishan Sharma; Amane Abdul-Razzak; Xuran Jiang; Andrew Day; Daren K Heyland
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10.  The challenge of consolation: nurses' experiences with spiritual and existential care for the dying-a phenomenological hermeneutical study.

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1.  "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
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2.  "I Had a Lot More Planned": The Existential Dimensions of Prognosis Communication with Adults with Advanced Cancer.

Authors:  Elise C Tarbi; Robert Gramling; Christine Bradway; Elizabeth G Broden; Salimah H Meghani
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