| Literature DB >> 29950822 |
Camelia Rohani1, Maryam Sedaghati Kesbakhi2, Jamileh Mohtashami3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Empathy is one of the most important communication skills in clinical practice, specifically in the field of oncology. Empathic competences have a significant meaning for caring and therapeutic relations in nurses' responsibilities. Clinical empathy brings positive performance, thus patients' emotions are perceived and expressed more easily. Clinical empathy is contextual, interpersonal and affective, but it is also difficult to study. Awareness of oncology nurses' perception of this phenomenon might help them to plan for more effective patient-centered consultations within interventional programs. Therefore, the aim of this study was to explore the content of clinical empathy with cancer patients from the perspective of oncology nurses. PATIENTS AND METHODS: In this qualitative study, 15 oncology nurses were selected by purposive sampling. A semi-structured face-to-face interview was conducted with each of the participants. After data collection, all interviews were transcribed and reviewed, and then primary codes, sub-categories and categories were extracted. The data were analyzed with the conventional content analysis method by MAXQDA 10 software.Entities:
Keywords: clinical empathy; co-presence; metacognition; oncology nursing; perception; qualitative research
Year: 2018 PMID: 29950822 PMCID: PMC6016590 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S156441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Participant characteristics (n=15)
| Variable | Classification | N (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | <30 | 2 (13.3) |
| >30 | 13 (86.6) | |
| Gender | Male | 6 (40) |
| Female | 9 (60) | |
| Marital status | Single | 4 (26.6) |
| Married | 11 (73.3) | |
| Work experience in nursing (years) | <1 | 0 (0) |
| 1–4 | 3 (20) | |
| ≥5 | 12 (80) | |
| Work experience in oncology field (years) | <1 | 2 (13.3) |
| 1–4 | 8 (53.3) | |
| ≥5 | 5 (33.3) | |
| Job title | Nurse | 13 (86.6) |
| Head Nurse | 2 (13.3) | |
| Empathy score based on the JSE-NS version R (range: 20–140) | <60 | 3 (20) |
| 60–90 | 3 (20) | |
| >90 | 9 (60) |
Abbreviation: JSE-NS version R, Jefferson Scale of Empathy-Nursing Student version R.
Categories, subcategories and examples of participant quotations
| Category | Subcategory | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Co-presence | Access | “A patient really needs mental attention. We should not neglect them. We have to listen to them. When they encounter a problem, it should be handled as quickly as possible” [N, 12]. |
| Altruism | “I believe that humans should help each other, especially when that person belongs to the lower class, even in the case that the person is in torment because he/she cannot speak Persian. In this case, I will go to him/her and help him/her to understand what he/she wants and what he/she does not want” [N, 1]. | |
| Giving information and keep a good communication | “A nurse should explain the side effects of the disease to the patient; he/she should inform them about the disease and its progress” [N, 4]. | |
| Moral communication | “Generally, I am an ethical person, I’m used to saying hello to everyone and enthusiastically say good morning when I arrive at work” [N, 1]. | |
| Relationship based on honesty | “When we talk about the truth, we should talk explicitly and with our heart, Patients sometimes love us more than psychologists. For example, a psychologist goes to the patient and speaks to them and then we go to the patient and talk to him/her and he/she says that I like you more than that gentleman who has a professor beard. The psychologist came to me and asked me some questions, and I did not finally understand what she said. Psychologists are scientifically successful and we are successful in terms of emotional feedback. In short, you see that we are better in the emotional encounter, and we show better empathy to the patient than a psychologist” [N, 13]. | |
| Empathic concern | “We should pay attention to patient’s states. For example: the patient comes to you and he is afraid, but he tells you he is not afraid. But he presses his hands constantly. He chews his lips and shakes his legs and is terribly terrified. But when we ask him if he is afraid or not? He says no, I’m not. Here, as a nurse, you tell the patient that I’ve noticed your fears and concerns and I am here to help you” [N, 13]. | |
| Paying attention to spirituality | “If you really like the patient, it is possible for you to help him physically. But also you can help him spiritually. You can do a lot for him, things that you do not do for other patients. Sometimes we talk to a patient for an hour to calm him down. And give him hope for life” [N, 8]. | |
| Being open in communication | “During IV procedure, you can talk to the patient, or just joke with him, or you can ask him a few questions, for example: How are you today? Or, the color of this dress looks good on you. Or, how are your kids? If you can communicate with them, then patients will forget their problems and they will tell you that they are happy” [N, 6]. | |
| Relationship based on trustworthiness | “I try to make a friendly relationship with the patient and his/her companion. Because they may be hiding some things or not saying some things because of the fears that they have. I want them to be relaxed and to tell me everything, even those things that they could not tell to the physician. Therefore, such a relationship can help them to recover from their disease” [N, 7]. | |
| Elixir of love | “This is my experience when I took the patient’s hand in my hand; this caused him to be calm. It was so impressive to me that it seemed like an elixir of love. Yes, it was as if the elixir of love had been injected into the patient” [N, 1]. | |
| Compassionate attention | “One of my patients was seventeen years old and had a fever. I had a cervical disc and I was in a very bad state. The person I was responsible for was very oppressive and I paid a lot of attention to him. Morally I could not leave the patient. You know that now the nurses do not do the footbath, but the relatives of the patient do this. But I can remember the night that I footbathed the patient all night long. It was the air of the twilight. The voice of Azan was raised. And I still had to footbath the patient” [N, 1]. | |
| Approachability | “For example in the oncology ward of the hospital, leukemia patients are the same age as you are and some of them have a close relationship with you. This means that they come 7 or 8 times for chemotherapy. Then you realize that the patient has entered shock or expiration phase. I can recall three cases like this, who came to our house with their families several times and we went to their house for the intravenous cannulation (IV) procedure and that meant we had a very close relationship with each other” [N, 10]. | |
| Metacognition | Self-control | “It is obvious that this kind of patient is very nervous and they may yell at us. We must control ourselves. It is necessary that we help the patient to be calm. If I behave like the patient, his/her behavior will be worse because they have nothing to lose” [N, 9]. |
| Self-awareness | “Sometimes I feel that we have to solve our own problems that we are aware of them. There are some problems that only the person himself/herself knows. A human being can hide many things from others. Things that only he/she himself/herself knows about them. If we really believe that we have a problem, then we can talk with a counselor and treat ourselves. So at first, we should treat ourselves and then we can help to the patient” [N, 7]. | |
| Recognition of the situation | “I worked at night shift in the oncology ward and I was busy with work. But I recognized that I should stay beside the patient’s bed for 2 or 3 minutes and talk to him/her to make him/her calm. Otherwise, I knew that if I ignore the patient’s problem, this, in turn, can cause problems that later I had to spend many hours to solve them and this, in turn, can cause a delay in other works. If at that time I did not have an emergency work, or if I could do that work half an hour later, I would do it, because it really was useful” [N, 1]. | |
| Flexibility | “Sometimes we do something that is favorable for the patient. For example, the patient may say that I do not want this or that thing, or he/she may ask that if it is possible to do that thing at another time? Or they may say: Is it possible for me to finish my lunch or dinner? In such cases, I say no problem. Then I’m leaving and I’ll be back for 10 minutes and then do IV procedures. I communicate with them in this way. It’s all about empathy that you take care of or protect the patient” [N, 9]. | |
| Emotional reflection | “Some of my colleagues say: It’s normal for us to see this situation in these patients. So at the time of work, we no longer see that nurses are frowning or there is no reaction in their face. But I’m not like that, for example, I woke up at 5 am and took the patient’s medication for him and in that time I saw that this patient’s mother was caressing and kissing him, and in that time tears flowed from my eyes” [N, 1]. | |
| Aesthetic feeling | “In many cases, I write a poem for the patients, and the reason for writing this poem is that I want to give them positive energy. One of my patients told me that, when I read this poem, I believe in this poem and this belief is very effective in my well-being. Sometimes I read impromptu poetry for them and maybe later I forget that poem, but I’m used to writing special poems for every special patient” [N, 7]. | |
| Perception | Seeing from the patient’s perspective | “A nurse should stand in the patient shoe and think in such a way that this patient is like his/her brother or sister. A nurse should pay attention to the patient requests and feel the patient pain as if he/she himself/herself were in pain. An oncology nurse should sympathize with the patients and if his/her patient is at pain, the nurse should feel the pain and if the patient vomits or feels nausea. The nurse should feel this pain and suffering and empathize with the patients” [N, 5]. |
| Seeing from the family of the patient’s perspective | “Like the patient family that feels mourning, for many times I myself stand in patient’s family shoe and most often after the patient’s death we let their families spend 20–30 minutes with the deceased body to say good-by to him/her. As a nurse, I have experienced the sense of losing and mourning for most of the patients that I have lost” [N, 15]. | |
| Emotional connection | “For example, if a person has a high level of understanding, the nurse and patient can connect with each other and in fact, this is empathy” [N, 4]. | |
| Inherent nature | Trait | “Human beings with any level of self-sacrifice that they have, at first think of their own interests, but you can find some exceptions in special nurses that they first think about their patients and if their children call them, or when they themselves are hungry or thirsty, they privilege the patient over himself/herself and for example, he/she tells to his/her children: ask your uncle to do this for you, I cannot do anything for you now. So you can find such exceptions in nurses and some nurses are devoted” [N, 13]. |
| Automatic response | “I think that some individuals can empathize with others automatically. Such empathy takes place in the nursing of the patient, especially in cancer patients, because these patients can stimulate such a sense in us more than others” [N, 3]. | |
| Didactic nature | Training | “Learning is effective in the sense of empathy that a nurse may have. Some people are kinder than others and this is due to the fact that they have learned empathy in their family environment” [N, 15]. |
| Role model | “For example, a child may express his/her feelings easily, and the other child, on the contrary, may be forbidden by his/her parents to express his/her feelings. It is possible that the child grows up in a family in which the mother is affectionate. As a result, various factors contribute to the formation of an empathic relationship” [N, 3]. |
Abbreviation: N, nurse.