This paper presents a qualitative study exploring the meaning of 'dignity' to patients, relatives and professionals. It examines the impact of advanced illness and treatment and the issues pertinent to caring for dignity. Depth interviews were conducted with eight patients, six relatives and seven members of the multiprofessional team. A phenomenological approach to data analysis was adopted. Dignity was found to be a complex phenomenon. It is composed of the dimensions 'being human', 'having control', 'relationship and belonging' and 'maintaining the individual self'. These dimensions seemed to be held in equilibrium by each individual. The importance of each may alter in response to threats to dignity such as advancing illness and how one is treated within it, in an attempt to cope and adapt. Caring for dignity is challenging because it involves balancing the multiple needs of both users and providers of palliative care and the different perceptions and dimensions of dignity itself.
This study examined the ethical issues experienced by nurses working in a small group of elderly persons' care settings in the UK, using a survey questionnaire previously used in other countries for examining the cultural aspects of ethical issues. However 'culture' relates not only to ethnicity but also the organizational culture in which care is delivered. Nurses working in elderly persons' care settings described a range of issues faced when caring for elderly terminally ill people, which illustrated the different needs of patients, relatives, professionals and society. These issues related to the unique needs of elderly people (such as dementia sufferers) and could have an impact on patients' quality of death.
This article presents a retrospective case note review of in-patients at one UK hospice considered for discharge to nursing homes during 1999 and 2000. The idea of a nursing home placement was introduced, on average, around 9 days after admission to the hospice; the most common reason cited being the inability to cope at home. Nearly a third of the patients expressed negative or ambivalent feelings about the idea. Transferring patients from hospice to nursing home is often necessary to avoid pressures on hospice beds. The potential distress of transferring patients, particularly when nearing the end of life, must be balanced against the needs of patients on hospice waiting lists. Of the 41 cases reviewed, 16 were transferred to nursing homes as planned, with a mean length of stay of just over 8 weeks. The current provision of palliative care in nursing homes raises ethical questions about transferring patients to an unfamiliar environment that may not necessarily be able to offer the same quality of palliative care. Clear communication with patients and their families and a consistent process are important to reduce some of the distress associated with this issue.
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