2015
DOI: 10.1097/njh.0000000000000179
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Patients’ Perception of Time in Palliative Care

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The way the couples coexist and embody shared time dimensions builds on findings from metasynthesis of qualitative literature on patients’ perception of time in palliative care. 53 This metasynthesis of research similarly revealed how terminally ill patients move toward perceptions of time that are less clock-based and more internalized and embodied as they make sense of living with a terminal illness. 53 This resonates also with literature that describes how individuals relate to time in new ways when they are chronically ill, a phenomenon that links to the ways they create meaning of their illness and experience self.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The way the couples coexist and embody shared time dimensions builds on findings from metasynthesis of qualitative literature on patients’ perception of time in palliative care. 53 This metasynthesis of research similarly revealed how terminally ill patients move toward perceptions of time that are less clock-based and more internalized and embodied as they make sense of living with a terminal illness. 53 This resonates also with literature that describes how individuals relate to time in new ways when they are chronically ill, a phenomenon that links to the ways they create meaning of their illness and experience self.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This appears, for some, to lead to disconnect between the temporal experiences of the patient and significant others. Since belonging occupations can be described as those which “tie the person to others through relationships,” disconnected temporality may disrupt the sense of belonging to one another (Essential Yeh & McColl, 2019, p. 112; Giuliani et al, 2015). Significant others who are predominantly situated in clock-based time may still focus on doing occupations, while others have adjusted their focus to being, belonging, and becoming occupations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Temporality is described as more diverse than clock time, to include embodied and situated time, such as biological, relational, institutional, and so on (Ellingsen et al, 2013; Lövgren et al, 2010; Nimmon et al, 2018). The existential and embodied experiences of dying may cause dying people to experience temporality differently than those around them (Giuliani et al, 2015; Robertson, 2014). This divergent temporality may contribute to a sense of alienation, because the dying individual is living outside clock time, in which the majority of society, health care professionals, and perhaps their families operate (Giuliani et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On myös tutkimusta merkityksistä, joita fyysisellä ympäristöllä (Brereton ym. 2012;Slatyer, Pienaar, Williams, Proctor & Hewitt 2015;Porock, Pollock & Jurgens 2009), potilaan aikakäsi-tyksellä ja henkilöstön rakenteella (Giuliani, Piredda, Ghilardi & Marinis 2015;Roberts & Hurst 2012;Kayser-Jones ym. 2003) sekä toimintakäytännöillä, esimerkiksi tiedonsaannilla (Lundquist, Rasmussen & Axelsson 2011), on kuolevan hoidossa ja kuolemassa.…”
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