Communicating spirituality, dying and a "good death" at the end-of-life: The role of hospice interdisciplinary team members
by Tullis Owen, Jillian A., Ph.D., UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA, 2009, 256 pages; 3420527

Abstract:

Hospices use interdisciplinary teams to aid patients and families as they cope with the imminence of death while helping them achieve a death free of physical and spiritual pain, also known as a good death. This study investigated the communication between hospice team members and their patients regarding spirituality, dying, death and a good death. Through 300 hours of participant observation and interviews with hospice staff at one large not-for-profit hospice in the Southeastern United States this project shows that team members understand patient's spirituality through a religious frame potentially compromising spiritual care. Talk between patients and their care team rarely focuses on what constitutes a good death and team members eventually come to narrate all hospice deaths as good.

 
AdviserCarolyn Ellis
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA
SourceDAI/A 71-09, p. , Sep 2010
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsReligion; Communication; Aging; Spirituality
Publication Number3420527
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