The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care

Quality end-of-life care in the adult critical care remains a high priority for numerous professional agencies and organizations due to advanced technologies that sustain or extent life, regardless of life quality. The purpose of this study was to describe how family members of patients in adult cri...

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Main Author: Baumhover, Nancy Catherine
Other Authors: Reed, Pamela G.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/311478
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-3114782015-10-23T05:29:36Z The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care Baumhover, Nancy Catherine Reed, Pamela G. Reed, Pamela G. Crist, Janice D. Rishel, Cindy J. Death Imminence Awareness End-of-Life Grounded Theory Nursing Critical Care Quality end-of-life care in the adult critical care remains a high priority for numerous professional agencies and organizations due to advanced technologies that sustain or extent life, regardless of life quality. The purpose of this study was to describe how family members of patients in adult critical care attain awareness that their loved one is dying or near death in the adult critical care setting. Two research questions were addressed: 1) What is the human-environment health process of knowing that end-of-life is imminent by family members of patients in the adult critical care area?, and 2) What factors influence the human-environment health process of knowing that end-of-life is imminent by family members in the adult critical care area? A Glaserian grounded theory design was utilized to conduct this retrospective study. Both primary (interviews) and secondary (poem, nursing art, song, media and film) data sources supported the emerging theory. The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care contained six phases: Patient's Near Death Awareness, Dying Right in Front of Me, Turning Points in the Patient's Condition, No Longer the Person I Once Knew, Doing Right by Them, and Time to Let Go. Influencing factors associated with this process were discussed as process facilitators and hindrances. Supportive nursing behaviors and actions as well as family member's emotional, behavioral, and physical reactions to having a critically ill family member were also discussed. This substantive theory will guide nursing education, practice, and research in the creation of nursing interventions, instrumentation, protocols, and policies and procedures aimed at providing cost effective quality end-of-life care in this specialized area of care. 2013 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/311478 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Death Imminence Awareness
End-of-Life
Grounded Theory
Nursing
Critical Care
spellingShingle Death Imminence Awareness
End-of-Life
Grounded Theory
Nursing
Critical Care
Baumhover, Nancy Catherine
The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
description Quality end-of-life care in the adult critical care remains a high priority for numerous professional agencies and organizations due to advanced technologies that sustain or extent life, regardless of life quality. The purpose of this study was to describe how family members of patients in adult critical care attain awareness that their loved one is dying or near death in the adult critical care setting. Two research questions were addressed: 1) What is the human-environment health process of knowing that end-of-life is imminent by family members of patients in the adult critical care area?, and 2) What factors influence the human-environment health process of knowing that end-of-life is imminent by family members in the adult critical care area? A Glaserian grounded theory design was utilized to conduct this retrospective study. Both primary (interviews) and secondary (poem, nursing art, song, media and film) data sources supported the emerging theory. The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care contained six phases: Patient's Near Death Awareness, Dying Right in Front of Me, Turning Points in the Patient's Condition, No Longer the Person I Once Knew, Doing Right by Them, and Time to Let Go. Influencing factors associated with this process were discussed as process facilitators and hindrances. Supportive nursing behaviors and actions as well as family member's emotional, behavioral, and physical reactions to having a critically ill family member were also discussed. This substantive theory will guide nursing education, practice, and research in the creation of nursing interventions, instrumentation, protocols, and policies and procedures aimed at providing cost effective quality end-of-life care in this specialized area of care.
author2 Reed, Pamela G.
author_facet Reed, Pamela G.
Baumhover, Nancy Catherine
author Baumhover, Nancy Catherine
author_sort Baumhover, Nancy Catherine
title The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
title_short The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
title_full The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
title_fullStr The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
title_full_unstemmed The Process of Death Imminence Awareness by Family Members of Patients in Adult Critical Care
title_sort process of death imminence awareness by family members of patients in adult critical care
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/311478
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