Learning from dying patients during their final days: life reflections gleaned from dignity therapy

Dignity therapy is a novel therapeutic approach designed to decrease suffering, enhance quality of life and bolster a sense of dignity for patients approaching death. The benefits of dignity therapy were previously documented in a sample of 100 terminally ill patients. One of the products of dignity...

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Veröffentlicht in:Palliative medicine 2010-10, Vol.24 (7), p.715-723
Hauptverfasser: Hack, Thomas F, McClement, Susan E, Chochinov, Harvey M, Cann, Beverley J, Hassard, Thomas H, Kristjanson, Linda J, Harlos, Mike
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container_end_page 723
container_issue 7
container_start_page 715
container_title Palliative medicine
container_volume 24
creator Hack, Thomas F
McClement, Susan E
Chochinov, Harvey M
Cann, Beverley J
Hassard, Thomas H
Kristjanson, Linda J
Harlos, Mike
description Dignity therapy is a novel therapeutic approach designed to decrease suffering, enhance quality of life and bolster a sense of dignity for patients approaching death. The benefits of dignity therapy were previously documented in a sample of 100 terminally ill patients. One of the products of dignity therapy is a transcript of the edited therapy session(s). In this qualitative study, 50 of the 100 (17 from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, and 33 from Perth, Australia) dignity therapy transcripts were randomly drawn, and independently coded and analysed by three investigators using a grounded theory approach. The transcripts revealed that dignity therapy serves to provide a safe, therapeutic environment for patients to review the most meaningful aspects of their lives in such a manner that their core values become apparent. The most common values expressed by the patients included ‘Family’, ‘Pleasure’, ‘Caring’, ‘A Sense of Accomplishment’, ‘True Friendship’, and ‘Rich Experience’. Exemplars of each of these values illustrate the pervasive, defining role of values in our lives. The findings are discussed in terms of values theory, the role of dignity therapy, and consideration of values clarification in clinicians’ efforts to enhance the dignity of terminally ill patients.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0269216310373164
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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Attitude to Death
Australia
Canada
Dignity
Dying people
Female
Grounded theory
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms - psychology
Palliative Care - psychology
Perception
Personhood
Pleasure
Qualitative research
Quality of Life - psychology
Terminal Care - methods
Terminally Ill - psychology
Terminally ill people
title Learning from dying patients during their final days: life reflections gleaned from dignity therapy
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