Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm

Hopelessness is a well-established predictor of suicide, and inspiring hope is an important goal in mental health care, but there are few studies of hope among persons with suicidal behavior. The aim of this study was to interpret the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Henning Herrestad, Stian Biong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2010-02-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/4651/5393
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spelling doaj-ece04ae3876a4a1fa19607a88f39d62c2020-11-25T00:11:07ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being1748-26231748-26312010-02-01511910.3402/qhw.v5i1.4651Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harmHenning HerrestadStian BiongHopelessness is a well-established predictor of suicide, and inspiring hope is an important goal in mental health care, but there are few studies of hope among persons with suicidal behavior. The aim of this study was to interpret the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm. Twelve persons that had engaged in suicidal behavior by ingesting an overdose of medication were interviewed shortly after hospitalization and asked to narrate about their hopes. The transcripts were analyzed using a phenomenological hermeneutic method inspired by Ricoeur's theory of interpretation. The naïve reading was one of hope being relational. The structural analysis identified three themes: hopes for life, hopes for death, and the act of hoping. We interpreted the common theme of the interviews as being definite and indefinite relational hopes for life and death. For clinicians, expressions of indefinite hopes may raise concerns about the low likelihood of fulfillment. However, the expression of indefinite hope may serve to avoid experiencing failure, disappointment, and hopelessness. http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/4651/5393Hopesuicidal behaviorintentional self-harm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Henning Herrestad
Stian Biong
spellingShingle Henning Herrestad
Stian Biong
Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Hope
suicidal behavior
intentional self-harm
author_facet Henning Herrestad
Stian Biong
author_sort Henning Herrestad
title Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
title_short Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
title_full Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
title_fullStr Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
title_full_unstemmed Relational hopes: A study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
title_sort relational hopes: a study of the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
issn 1748-2623
1748-2631
publishDate 2010-02-01
description Hopelessness is a well-established predictor of suicide, and inspiring hope is an important goal in mental health care, but there are few studies of hope among persons with suicidal behavior. The aim of this study was to interpret the lived experience of hope in some patients hospitalized for intentional self-harm. Twelve persons that had engaged in suicidal behavior by ingesting an overdose of medication were interviewed shortly after hospitalization and asked to narrate about their hopes. The transcripts were analyzed using a phenomenological hermeneutic method inspired by Ricoeur's theory of interpretation. The naïve reading was one of hope being relational. The structural analysis identified three themes: hopes for life, hopes for death, and the act of hoping. We interpreted the common theme of the interviews as being definite and indefinite relational hopes for life and death. For clinicians, expressions of indefinite hopes may raise concerns about the low likelihood of fulfillment. However, the expression of indefinite hope may serve to avoid experiencing failure, disappointment, and hopelessness.
topic Hope
suicidal behavior
intentional self-harm
url http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/4651/5393
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