| Literature DB >> 30732615 |
Sofia Tavemark1,2, Liselotte N Hermansson1,3, Karin Blomberg4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Activity participation may support clients in palliative care to maintain dignity and quality of life. Literature and policy documents state that occupational therapists should be part of the team in palliative care but provide limited guidance on how interventions should be employed. Thus, the aim was to describe occupational therapists' experiences of enabling activity for seriously ill and dying clients.Entities:
Keywords: Activities of daily living; Client participation; Leisure activities; Qualitative research; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30732615 PMCID: PMC6367774 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-019-0394-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1Recruitment process
Participant characteristics (n = 14)
| n | |
|---|---|
| Male | 1 |
| Female | 13 |
| Age | |
| 33–41 | 2 |
| 41–49 | 2 |
| 49–57 | 4 |
| 57–64 | 6 |
| Experience of occupational therapy practice at present (2014) a | |
| 1–12 years | 4 |
| 12–23 years | 4 |
| 23–34 years | 1 |
| 34–44 years | 4 |
| Experience of palliative care a | |
| 1–5 years | 1 |
| 5–10 years | 5 |
| 10–15 years | 4 |
| 15–25 years | 3 |
| Healthcare context a | |
| Urban home-care services | 5 |
| Rural home-care services | 0 |
| Nursing and care homes | 5 |
| County council clinics | 4 |
| Course in palliative care a | |
| Yes | 10 |
adata from one subject missing
Example of the analysis process
| Meaning unit | Condensed meaning unit | Code | Subcategory | Category |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| And all the trips that are made too, I know when I was out there and we ... I, I still have an image in my head, we were out, now I can’t remember how, but it was in the final stages for those gentlemen that we took out to [place name], and they are sitting on a jetty with fishing rods with no hooks on but and smoking ci- ci- cigars, both those two gentlemen, it was kind of this quality of life. | Going on requested excursions at the end of life to have quality of life | Excursions that provide quality of life | Activity that provides quality of life | Activities based on the client’s wishes and possibilities |
| But of course you notice this, we’ve got this personal, personal integrity, yes, that we talk about and you notice this of course, that they really want to manage this, especially going to the toilet by themselves, and they would like to manage all the personal things ... uh, if I’m to go and make an ADL assessment and that sort of thing, then I can, but of course I feel that it can feel awkward because they think they can feel ashamed that they can’t manage that particular thing themselves and that they want to manage all that, eating and drinking themselves, and going to the toilet and dressing themselves and taking care of their personal hygiene. | Dignity means that the person wants to manage personal tasks independently | Personal activities to maintain dignity | Activity to maintain dignity |
Categories and sub-categories from the results
| Categories | Activities based on the client’s wishes and circumstances | Prioritizing activities together with the client | Facilitating factors to enable activity for clients in palliative care | Limiting factors to enable activity for clients in palliative care | Areas for improvement to enable activity |
| Subcategories | Activity to get away from the care environment | Activity depending on the client’s wishes and motivation | A client with a positive attitude and motivation | Limitations in the physical environment | Need nearby premises for activities |