Embodied Ethics: Phenomenology of the NICU Nurse’s Touch

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Abstract

This study was a phenomenological exploration of the ethics of the nurse’s touch in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). I explore several examples of touching encounters as gathered from NICU nurses through interview and observation, and organize the lived meanings around several thematic statements. These include the learning touch: finding a way to hold the baby, the marking touch: when touch lingers long after physical contact, the missing touch: touching without physical contact, the gnostic touch: the possibility of knowing an other and ourselves, and the call of touch: drawn to hold. Exploring the touching gestures of NICU nurses discloses the relational ethics inherent to caring practices. By attempting to articulate these practices, the hope is that the significance and contribution of the nurse’s touch might be recognized and brought forward to our individual and professional consciousness, conversations, and curricula.

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APA

Lemermeyer, G. (2021). Embodied Ethics: Phenomenology of the NICU Nurse’s Touch. Qualitative Health Research, 31(9), 1570–1581. https://doi.org/10.1177/10497323211005434

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