Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient

Nurse educators are responsible for accompanying students towards becoming capable, competent professional nurses who are a credit to themselves, their patients, colleagues and profession. Student nurses need, therefore, to be taught to render comprehensive nursing care to patients in all stages of...

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Main Authors: D Van Rooyen, R Laing, WJ Kotzé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2005-09-01
Series:Curationis
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1009
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spelling doaj-81f32b196ed641a6b3fb9282a1716f142020-11-24T23:17:04ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792005-09-01284313910.4102/curationis.v28i4.1009896Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patientD Van Rooyen0R Laing1WJ Kotzé2Nelson Mandela metropolitan UniversityProfessional nurse, AustraliaNelson Mandela metropolitan UniversityNurse educators are responsible for accompanying students towards becoming capable, competent professional nurses who are a credit to themselves, their patients, colleagues and profession. Student nurses need, therefore, to be taught to render comprehensive nursing care to patients in all stages of their lives, including when they are dying. Being confronted with human suffering and death is challenging and traumatic. Those exposed to such events on a daily basis need to have a solid foundation of self preservation to see past the pain of suffering and to bring light and hope to those in need. A young student nurse will only experience positive growth and development in these circumstances if she is also cared for and guided with understanding. The researcher utilized a qualitative, explorative, descriptive and contextual design based on the phenomenological approach to enquiry. The following question was asked at the beginning of each unstructured phenomenological interview: “How was if for you to care for a dying or deceased patient?” The central theme identified that student nurses experience turmoil in their different relationships in their accompaniment of the dying patient. Guidelines based on the central theme and sub-themes that emerged from raw data, as well as literature, are offered as strategies to promote/enhance optimal accompaniment of student nurses caring for the dying patient.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1009
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D Van Rooyen
R Laing
WJ Kotzé
spellingShingle D Van Rooyen
R Laing
WJ Kotzé
Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
Curationis
author_facet D Van Rooyen
R Laing
WJ Kotzé
author_sort D Van Rooyen
title Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
title_short Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
title_full Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
title_fullStr Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
title_full_unstemmed Accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
title_sort accompaniment needs of nursing students related to the dying patient
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2005-09-01
description Nurse educators are responsible for accompanying students towards becoming capable, competent professional nurses who are a credit to themselves, their patients, colleagues and profession. Student nurses need, therefore, to be taught to render comprehensive nursing care to patients in all stages of their lives, including when they are dying. Being confronted with human suffering and death is challenging and traumatic. Those exposed to such events on a daily basis need to have a solid foundation of self preservation to see past the pain of suffering and to bring light and hope to those in need. A young student nurse will only experience positive growth and development in these circumstances if she is also cared for and guided with understanding. The researcher utilized a qualitative, explorative, descriptive and contextual design based on the phenomenological approach to enquiry. The following question was asked at the beginning of each unstructured phenomenological interview: “How was if for you to care for a dying or deceased patient?” The central theme identified that student nurses experience turmoil in their different relationships in their accompaniment of the dying patient. Guidelines based on the central theme and sub-themes that emerged from raw data, as well as literature, are offered as strategies to promote/enhance optimal accompaniment of student nurses caring for the dying patient.
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1009
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