| Literature DB >> 35351123 |
ShiShuang Zhou1, LiZhen Wei2, Wei Hua3, XioaChong He4, Jia Chen5.
Abstract
AIM: To describe the experiences of student nurses in confronting the death of their patients, and to understand how they cope with these events and to what extent there are unmet needs that can be addressed in their trainings.Entities:
Keywords: Death education; Death experience; Nursing students; Qualitative analysis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35351123 PMCID: PMC8966360 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-022-00846-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Characteristics of participants
| N | Education background | Age | Sex | Practice time (Month) | Area of residence | Religious faith | Received palliative courses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N1 | A | 18 | Female | 9 | R | No | Yes |
| N2 | B | 22 | Female | 6 | U | No | Yes |
| N3 | B | 20 | Female | 7 | U | No | Yes |
| N4 | A | 19 | Female | 9 | R | No | No |
| N5 | B | 21 | Female | 8 | U | No | No |
| N6 | A | 19 | Female | 9 | R | No | Yes |
| N7 | A | 18 | Female | 9 | U | No | Yes |
| N8 | A | 20 | Female | 7 | U | No | Yes |
| N9 | B | 21 | Female | 9 | U | No | Yes |
| N10 | B | 21 | Female | 9 | U | Yes | No |
| N11 | B | 22 | Female | 9 | U | No | Yes |
| N12 | B | 18 | Female | 9 | U | No | Yes |
| N13 | B | 18 | Female | 9 | R | No | Yes |
| N14 | B | 20 | Female | 7 | R | No | Yes |
| N15 | B | 21 | Female | 6 | U | No | Yes |
| N16 | B | 21 | Female | 7 | R | No | Yes |
| N17 | B | 23 | Female | 9 | R | No | No |
| N18 | B | 20 | Female | 9 | R | No | No |
| N19 | B | 21 | Female | 7 | U | No | No |
A:Junior College; B: Bachelor
R:Rural area; U:Urban area
Interview guideline
| 1. What comes to your mind when you hear the word death of a patient? | |
| 2. Have you ever thought about patients’ death during your clinical practice? (If “yes”, ask their feelings and thoughts). | |
| 3. Tell me about your experience with the patient’s death. | |
| 4. Could you describe one of patients’ death scene that impressed you most? | |
| 5. What were your feelings at patients’ death time? | |
| 6. What were your feelings after a patients’ death? | |
| 7. Did you have any changes after experiencing patients’ death? (If “yes”, ask their changes in thoughts and daily life) | |
| 8. What did you do to cope the death experience? | |
| 9. What did you need after experiencing the most impressive patients’ death? | |
| 10. Do you think there is another question I should have asked and do you have a question for me? |
Colaizzi’s seven-step procedure of data analysis
Themes and sub-themes of the most impressive death experience among nursing students
| Themes | Sub-themes | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Emotional experience | Anticipations of experiencing patients’ deaths before entering clinical practice | Taboo Fear Unprepared Natural Acceptance |
| Feelings witnessing a patient’s death | Scared Curious Startle Regretted Helpless | |
| Feelings after patient death | Dread Guilty Sadness Pity Upset Worry | |
| 2. Challenge | Cognition | Blind denial Obsessive thinking |
| Somatization | Poor appetite Sleeplessness Visual illusion | |
| Habit | Irregular of diet Refuse to meat | |
| Profession | Empathy fatigue Emotion contagion Knowledge gap | |
| 3. Growth | Personal growth | Attention of health Awareness of cherish |
| Professional growth | Life responsibility Professional identity | |
| 4. Coping | Exploratory method | Sharing with trust one Writing down |
| Avoidant method | Do not remind death experience Transformation to other things Avoidance | |
| 5. Support | Clinical teachers | Give ear to students Provide experience relating to death Provide positive coping methods |
| Education | Knowledge about death Skills to deal with death |