2022
DOI: 10.1177/26323524221122346
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Palliative care and its own identity, through an autoethnography: do you recognize these patterns?

Abstract: Introduction: After more than 25 years working in palliative care (PC) observing thousands of patients and family behaviors, I use my long experience and notes as a source of data for a qualitative research study. The aim is to identify frequent families' behavior patterns in PC and better describe the culture in PC. Methods: This article is part of a larger project, using autoethnography as methodology, with the aim of helping doctors and interested health professionals better understand the culture and reali… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
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“…Those in favour of it state that people who want to die at home should have the option to do so. However, as noted by Neto, 48 few people fully comprehend what dying at home requires, and family caregivers can often experience poor support in this matter. 48 As today’s patients are sicker and often need more complex interventions and medical care, caring for a dying person at home is more complicated than in the past.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Those in favour of it state that people who want to die at home should have the option to do so. However, as noted by Neto, 48 few people fully comprehend what dying at home requires, and family caregivers can often experience poor support in this matter. 48 As today’s patients are sicker and often need more complex interventions and medical care, caring for a dying person at home is more complicated than in the past.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our study, this ideal was expressed as the desire to have a good life while dying [despite the exhaustion] and plan for the time ahead [despite the worries]. However, grounding a preference for home death on nostalgic 47 and romanticised 48,49 ideals -aiming for 'a good death' -might lead to a sense of failure for both dying persons and their primary caregivers when it is impossible to achieve this. 8 Based on these insights and how the preference for home death was negotiated in this study, we argue that reconstructing such preference -making it valid and applicable to people's situations and life trajectories -can be a way to support dyadic governance and agreement in the end-of-life phase.…”
Section: Negotiating Idealsmentioning
confidence: 91%
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