An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis

The aim of this study sets out to better understand nephrology nurses’ lived experiences of dying and deaths of patients with ESKD following withdrawal of dialysis. A qualitative research design using an interpretative phenomenological approach was used to explore the experiences of a purposive hete...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bidii, Dempto Boniface
Other Authors: Fouche, Nicki A
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Health Sciences 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31477
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-314772020-10-06T05:11:28Z An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis Bidii, Dempto Boniface Fouche, Nicki A Dialysis withdrawal Palliative/hospice care Renal nursing/Nephrology Death anxiety The aim of this study sets out to better understand nephrology nurses’ lived experiences of dying and deaths of patients with ESKD following withdrawal of dialysis. A qualitative research design using an interpretative phenomenological approach was used to explore the experiences of a purposive heterogeneous sample of eight nephrology nurses who were working in private dialysis units. Information was gathered by phenomenological conversations and feed-back sessions. Colaizzi’s phenomenological method was employed to formulate four main themes: 1. Emotional trauma 2. Detachment 3. Loss of altruistic values in nursing 4. being-with-death For the participants in this study, emotional trauma was the most significant. The participants experienced a sense of powerlessness which caused emotions of hopelessness and anger and subsequently a sense of premature mourning and detachment. This state of hopelessness proved to be an obstacle in patient care, resulting in the altruistic values of nursing to be no longer applied. The participants’ ontological confrontation of being-with-death was evident, as they came to terms with the reality of their own death. Recommendations are offered to address the educational aspects of death and dying for nephrology nurses. This study endorses the need for further research into patients with ESKD ‘end-of-life’ which can influence how healthcare professionals should treat these patients during this phase. 2020-03-04T11:02:28Z 2020-03-04T11:02:28Z 2019 2020-03-04T10:45:46Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31477 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Division of Nursing and Midwifery
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Dialysis withdrawal
Palliative/hospice care
Renal nursing/Nephrology
Death anxiety
spellingShingle Dialysis withdrawal
Palliative/hospice care
Renal nursing/Nephrology
Death anxiety
Bidii, Dempto Boniface
An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
description The aim of this study sets out to better understand nephrology nurses’ lived experiences of dying and deaths of patients with ESKD following withdrawal of dialysis. A qualitative research design using an interpretative phenomenological approach was used to explore the experiences of a purposive heterogeneous sample of eight nephrology nurses who were working in private dialysis units. Information was gathered by phenomenological conversations and feed-back sessions. Colaizzi’s phenomenological method was employed to formulate four main themes: 1. Emotional trauma 2. Detachment 3. Loss of altruistic values in nursing 4. being-with-death For the participants in this study, emotional trauma was the most significant. The participants experienced a sense of powerlessness which caused emotions of hopelessness and anger and subsequently a sense of premature mourning and detachment. This state of hopelessness proved to be an obstacle in patient care, resulting in the altruistic values of nursing to be no longer applied. The participants’ ontological confrontation of being-with-death was evident, as they came to terms with the reality of their own death. Recommendations are offered to address the educational aspects of death and dying for nephrology nurses. This study endorses the need for further research into patients with ESKD ‘end-of-life’ which can influence how healthcare professionals should treat these patients during this phase.
author2 Fouche, Nicki A
author_facet Fouche, Nicki A
Bidii, Dempto Boniface
author Bidii, Dempto Boniface
author_sort Bidii, Dempto Boniface
title An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
title_short An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
title_full An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
title_fullStr An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
title_full_unstemmed An exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
title_sort exploration into nephrology nurses' lived experiences of caring for dying patients with end stage kidney disease following withdrawal of dialysis
publisher Faculty of Health Sciences
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31477
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