2013
DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2012.699888
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Participant Observation at the End-of-Life: Reflecting on Tears

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Cited by 8 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Other findings from these data have been published elsewhere. 22,[26][27][28][29] In each of these studies, our methods included audiotaped and transcribed interviews, and detailed field notes of our observations. What we noticed in the course of pursuing these studies was that some patient narratives about their experiences with hospice care fell outside of the goals of those projects.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other findings from these data have been published elsewhere. 22,[26][27][28][29] In each of these studies, our methods included audiotaped and transcribed interviews, and detailed field notes of our observations. What we noticed in the course of pursuing these studies was that some patient narratives about their experiences with hospice care fell outside of the goals of those projects.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…I do not think the patient and Sara realized that something special occurred; my emotions and thoughts were all kept inside and not verbalized or included in the field note. At the time of the study, I found it difficult to know how to handle or make use of my own emotions in the research process, an experience also described by Tullis (2012). Rethinking the situation, I can see that the one aspect of the common ground the three of us shared in this situation, although from very different angles, was the presence of suffering and death.…”
Section: Lived Observationsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Would they speak to someone about it and who? Were emotions expected and allowed by patients, relatives, and staff, and what functions did emotions serve (Tullis, 2012)?…”
Section: Lived Observationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Other CHC scholarship uses narrative and performative frameworks to illuminate embodied power dynamics surrounding health and illness as they intersect with disability and ableism (Scott, 2012(Scott, , 2015Spencer, 2019) (in)fertility (Johnson and Quinlan, 2016); pregnancy (Peterson, 2016), heteronormativity (Arrington, 2012;Silverman et al, 2012;Hudak and Bates, 2018), aging (Roscoe, 2018); and dying (Tullis, 2013;Sharf, 2019). A particularly compelling autoethnographic CHC study explores a researcher's (lack of) credibility when she seeks treatment for chronic pain and encounters health care providers and community members who greet her pain-wracked body with doubt, skepticism, and even ridicule (Birk, 2013).…”
Section: Embodied Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%