Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?

  The discussion of a palliative care and a dignified death has almost exclusively been applied to people dying of cancer. As people are getting older and are living longer, nursing homes have become an important place for end-of-life care and death. Dignity is a concept often used in health care do...

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Main Author: Dwyer, Lise-Lotte
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Ersta Sköndal högskola, Enheten för forskning om vård i livets slutskede 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:esh:diva-596
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7668-566-2
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-esh-5962013-01-08T13:09:14ZDignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?engDwyer, Lise-LotteErsta Sköndal högskola, Enheten för forskning om vård i livets slutskedeÖrebro : Örebro university2008Caring sciencesVårdvetenskap  The discussion of a palliative care and a dignified death has almost exclusively been applied to people dying of cancer. As people are getting older and are living longer, nursing homes have become an important place for end-of-life care and death. Dignity is a concept often used in health care documents but their meaning is rarely clarified. The main aim of this thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of what dignity meant to older people in end of life care as well as to nursing home staff. The thesis comprises four studies. The first and second study involved older people living in nursing home settings studied from a hermeneutic perspective. In the first study twelve older people in two nursing homes were interviewed two to four times over a period of 18–24 months during 2002–2003. Altogether, 39 interviews were analyzed by a hermeneutic method. Dignity was closely linked to self-image and identity. The themes of unrecognizable body, dependence and fragility constituted threats to dignity. The third theme, inner strength and sense of coherence, seemed to assist the older people in maintaining dignity of identity. In the second study the aim was to acquire a deeper understanding of how three older women from study I, created meaning in everyday life at the nursing home. A secondary analysis was carried out and showed meaning in everyday life was created by an inner dialogue, communication and relationships with others. The third study was to explore nursing home staff members’ experience of what dignity in end-of –life care means to older people and to themselves. Totally 21 interviews with staff were carried out and analyzed through a qualitative content analysis. The meaning of older people’s dignity was conceptualized as feeling trust, which implied being shown respect. Staff members’ dignity was conceptualized as maintaining self-respect. Dignity was threatened in situations where staff experienced themselves and the older people as being ignored and thereby marginalized. The fourth study was carried out through focus groups discussions with 20 staff members about seven older peoples dying death and care. The analyses showed that conversations and discussions about death were rare. Death was surrounded by silence. It was disclosed that the older dying person’s thoughts and attitudes of death were not explicitly known. A dignified death meant alleviation of bodily suffering and pain and meaningfulness. The staff’s ethical reasoning mainly concerned their experience of a gap between their personal ideals of what a dignified end of life should include and what they were able to provide in reality, which could result in conscious stress. Staff members need training and support. End of life care demands competence and teamwork. A challenge for future care of older people would be to develop a nursing home environment in which human dignity is promoted. Hemmet som den sista vårdplatsenDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:esh:diva-596urn:isbn:978-91-7668-566-2Örebro studies in caring sciences, 1652-1153 ; 19application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Caring sciences
Vårdvetenskap
spellingShingle Caring sciences
Vårdvetenskap
Dwyer, Lise-Lotte
Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
description   The discussion of a palliative care and a dignified death has almost exclusively been applied to people dying of cancer. As people are getting older and are living longer, nursing homes have become an important place for end-of-life care and death. Dignity is a concept often used in health care documents but their meaning is rarely clarified. The main aim of this thesis was to gain a deeper understanding of what dignity meant to older people in end of life care as well as to nursing home staff. The thesis comprises four studies. The first and second study involved older people living in nursing home settings studied from a hermeneutic perspective. In the first study twelve older people in two nursing homes were interviewed two to four times over a period of 18–24 months during 2002–2003. Altogether, 39 interviews were analyzed by a hermeneutic method. Dignity was closely linked to self-image and identity. The themes of unrecognizable body, dependence and fragility constituted threats to dignity. The third theme, inner strength and sense of coherence, seemed to assist the older people in maintaining dignity of identity. In the second study the aim was to acquire a deeper understanding of how three older women from study I, created meaning in everyday life at the nursing home. A secondary analysis was carried out and showed meaning in everyday life was created by an inner dialogue, communication and relationships with others. The third study was to explore nursing home staff members’ experience of what dignity in end-of –life care means to older people and to themselves. Totally 21 interviews with staff were carried out and analyzed through a qualitative content analysis. The meaning of older people’s dignity was conceptualized as feeling trust, which implied being shown respect. Staff members’ dignity was conceptualized as maintaining self-respect. Dignity was threatened in situations where staff experienced themselves and the older people as being ignored and thereby marginalized. The fourth study was carried out through focus groups discussions with 20 staff members about seven older peoples dying death and care. The analyses showed that conversations and discussions about death were rare. Death was surrounded by silence. It was disclosed that the older dying person’s thoughts and attitudes of death were not explicitly known. A dignified death meant alleviation of bodily suffering and pain and meaningfulness. The staff’s ethical reasoning mainly concerned their experience of a gap between their personal ideals of what a dignified end of life should include and what they were able to provide in reality, which could result in conscious stress. Staff members need training and support. End of life care demands competence and teamwork. A challenge for future care of older people would be to develop a nursing home environment in which human dignity is promoted. === Hemmet som den sista vårdplatsen
author Dwyer, Lise-Lotte
author_facet Dwyer, Lise-Lotte
author_sort Dwyer, Lise-Lotte
title Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
title_short Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
title_full Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
title_fullStr Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
title_full_unstemmed Dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
title_sort dignity in the end of life care : what does it mean to older people and staff in nursing homes?
publisher Ersta Sköndal högskola, Enheten för forskning om vård i livets slutskede
publishDate 2008
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:esh:diva-596
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-7668-566-2
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