Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse

Kadner (1994) defines therapeutic intimacy as "a confiding relationship between two people, a self-disclosure of personal information with the expectation of understanding and acceptance (consisting of) trust, closeness, self-disclosure and reciprocity." The lived experience of oncology n...

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Main Author: Painter, Vivian G.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2187
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-21872014-03-29T03:42:05Z Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse Painter, Vivian G. Kadner (1994) defines therapeutic intimacy as "a confiding relationship between two people, a self-disclosure of personal information with the expectation of understanding and acceptance (consisting of) trust, closeness, self-disclosure and reciprocity." The lived experience of oncology nurses who experience deep connected relationships with patients was explored in this study in an attempt to better describe the phenomenon, therapeutic intimacy. Significant statements created formulated meanings (sub-themes) which became organized around 15 themes. The themes formed several theme clusters. Finally, the theme clusters developed into a recognizable pattern of three categories, that helped to describe the experience of therapeutic intimacy: The Ingredients of Intimacy, The Kinds of Intimacy and The Meaning of Intimacy. Findings of the research provided a detailed description of what was prerequisite to the intimate experience, the range of intimate experiences to be engaged in and the results of the intimate experience from the nurses' perspectives. (Abstract shortened by UMI.) 2007-05-25T18:31:19Z 2007-05-25T18:31:19Z 1999-06-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2187 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Kadner (1994) defines therapeutic intimacy as "a confiding relationship between two people, a self-disclosure of personal information with the expectation of understanding and acceptance (consisting of) trust, closeness, self-disclosure and reciprocity." The lived experience of oncology nurses who experience deep connected relationships with patients was explored in this study in an attempt to better describe the phenomenon, therapeutic intimacy. Significant statements created formulated meanings (sub-themes) which became organized around 15 themes. The themes formed several theme clusters. Finally, the theme clusters developed into a recognizable pattern of three categories, that helped to describe the experience of therapeutic intimacy: The Ingredients of Intimacy, The Kinds of Intimacy and The Meaning of Intimacy. Findings of the research provided a detailed description of what was prerequisite to the intimate experience, the range of intimate experiences to be engaged in and the results of the intimate experience from the nurses' perspectives. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
author Painter, Vivian G.
spellingShingle Painter, Vivian G.
Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
author_facet Painter, Vivian G.
author_sort Painter, Vivian G.
title Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
title_short Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
title_full Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
title_fullStr Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
title_full_unstemmed Therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
title_sort therapeutic intimacy, the lived experience of the oncology nurse
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2187
work_keys_str_mv AT painterviviang therapeuticintimacythelivedexperienceoftheoncologynurse
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