Dignity and Palliative Care: a Search to Discover the True Meaning of the Concept of ‘Dying with Dignity’
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Date
2004
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Publisher
Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington
Abstract
This paper presents an exploration of a foundational goal of palliative care nursing which is to help patients die with dignity. The paper presents this practice exploration as a journey to gain understanding of the concept of dignity; it does not avoid the difficulties encountered in practice situations because dying with dignity is unique and curiously also invisible and different for everyone.
Much of human life is conducted through stories and much of nursing involves telling and listening to stories. Many of our social institutions are compromised almost entirely of opportunities for telling and retelling stories. Nurses are constantly listening to patients telling them what is going on in their lives and because of this the stories related here are written bold and raw. The three stories explore and reveal in-depth details of nursing practice that evolved and changed after reflection. The paper also reveals and explores the untold and often painful stories that challenge nurses’ capacity to offer dignified care.
To deepen the exploration towards discovering ways to articulate the complexity of dignity, the author reflected on the nature of the practice changes documented in the stories and then used a range of diverse literature and her love of the paintings and philosophy of a New Zealander, Ralph Hotere, to support her ideas that dignity is indeed a complex phenomenon.
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Keywords
Palliative care, Dying with dignity, Reflective practice, Narrative inquiry