华生
超个人的
愿景
背景(考古学)
心理学
心理治疗师
框架(结构)
亲身经历
定性研究
社会学
护理部
医学
社会科学
古生物学
自然语言处理
工程类
生物
结构工程
计算机科学
人类学
作者
Michael Kinsella,Pamela Fordham,Monica Williams,W. Peters
标识
DOI:10.1097/hnp.0000000000000682
摘要
End-of life-experiences, including profoundly meaningful dreams, visions, and sensations, may be experienced by caregivers at the time of a patient’s death, yet few caregivers feel comfortable discussing these experiences with colleagues or other members of the care unit. This article presents findings from a descriptive qualitative study of end-of-life experiences reported by caregivers and frames these experiences within Watson’s Theory of Transpersonal Caring, which is a holistic approach to health care that emphasizes the transpersonal caring relationship. Watson’s Theory is particularly useful for framing end-of-life experiences in a caregiving context as it avoids debates about the nature of these experiences and emphasizes their therapeutic value in human caring. This article also argues that it is time for open discussions about end-of-life experiences reported by caregivers and what they might teach us about death and dying.
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