Literature DB >> 28845718

Nurses' Experiences of Grief Following Patient Death: A Qualitative Approach.

Inaam A Khalaf1,2, Ghadeer Al-Dweik3, Hana Abu-Snieneh1, Laila Al-Daken4, Ruba M Musallam5, Mohammad BaniYounis6, Rula Al-Rimawi7, Atef Hassan Khatib8, Abla Habeeb Allah9, Maysoun Hussein Atoum10, Arwa Masadeh1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To explore the lived experiences of nurses' feelings, emotions, grief reactions, and coping mechanisms following their patients' death.
BACKGROUND: On a daily basis, nurses are experiencing patients' death, which exposes them to grief. Nurses' grief has not been sufficiently addressed in practice settings, although it has been a well-known threat to health and work performance.
DESIGN: A qualitative design guided by a phenomenological approach was adopted.
METHOD: Data were collected from a purposive sample of 21 Jordanian nurses by conducting three focus groups and analyzed using Colaizzi's framework.
FINDINGS: Four themes were generated in which participants reported feelings of grief following their patients' death. Their grief emotions were reported as sadness, crying, anger, shock, denial, faith, fear, guilt, fear of the family's reaction, and powerlessness.
CONCLUSIONS: The study provided evidence that nurses respond emotionally to patients' death and experience grief. Nurses are burdened by recurrent patients' deaths and try to cope and overcome their grief. This study emphasizes the importance of developing strategies to help nurses positively cope with their grief from a holistic perspective. This will reflect positively on the nurses' performance.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Jordanian nurses; death; dying; experiences; grief; qualitative; support

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28845718     DOI: 10.1177/0898010117720341

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Holist Nurs        ISSN: 0898-0101


  5 in total

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3.  Feelings and Emotions of Nurses Related to Dying and Death of Patients - A Pilot Study.

Authors:  Anna Maria Kostka; Adriana Borodzicz; Sylwia Anna Krzemińska
Journal:  Psychol Res Behav Manag       Date:  2021-06-04

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5.  "They Stay With You": Nursing Home Staff's Emotional Experiences of Being in a Close Relationship With a Resident in Long-Term Care who Died.

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  5 in total

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