Caring for individuals at the end of life in a curative care unit: Privileges and heartbreaks

  • Fortin M
  • Bouchard L
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Abstract

The objective of this study was to describe the experience of caring for individuals at the end of life by five nurses working in curative care units. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to gain a better understanding of the meaning nurses give to this experience. The analysis of results, based on Giorgi's phenomenological method (1997), highlighted a central meaning: it is a human experience fraught with paradoxes where the bedside nurse feels both privileged to be accompanying these individuals at the end of their lives and torn between the medical priority given to curative care and the lesser priority given to palliative care. This study offers relevant options for nurse managers wanting to improve these nurses' work environment and the quality of care for individuals at the end of life.

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Fortin, M.-L., & Bouchard, L. (2009). Caring for individuals at the end of life in a curative care unit: Privileges and heartbreaks. Canadian Oncology Nursing Journal, 19(3), 1–6. https://doi.org/10.5737/1181912x193f1f6

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