2008
DOI: 10.12968/ijpn.2008.14.10.31490
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The relevance of time in palliative care nursing practice

Abstract: This article describes time as a contextual factor in palliative caring practices and contributes to an understanding of the connections between time and the quality of palliative care. The article is based on an explorative and qualitative research study inspired by grounded theory. The empirical data of the study were obtained through field studies and interview. The interpretation is indebted to a philosophical interpretation that assumes time to be consciously organised into two categories: an objective cl… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Hospital settings seem to be a preferred context for these ethnographic nursing studies, since 37 of 45 studies are in hospitals. Five studies used a combination of a hospital setting and the participants’ private homes and three observe in hospital and municipalities . Also, a combination of a cancer rehabilitation centre and the participants’ homes was present in one included study .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hospital settings seem to be a preferred context for these ethnographic nursing studies, since 37 of 45 studies are in hospitals. Five studies used a combination of a hospital setting and the participants’ private homes and three observe in hospital and municipalities . Also, a combination of a cancer rehabilitation centre and the participants’ homes was present in one included study .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These tensions can make it challenging for both the patient and health worker to tone up after each other and to meet attuned in harmony in time at the place they are. The tension in this opposition can mark the encounter between patient and health worker with disharmony, but as emphasized by Dalgaard and Delmar (2008), if the structural frame of clock time and personal time co-exist harmoniously, the healthcare worker and patient may meet in a shared reality in which the professionals presence is characterized by a flexibility that encourages a contextualized and individualized care in which the healthcare workers doings and beings represent states of open attentiveness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dalgaard (53) describes the phenomenon as: A selective attention , which is developed by nurses as a nonconscious strategy to save time. Nurses act by routine and are not open to patients’ needs and appeal (53, 54), which according to our theoretical frame can be seen as the opposite as ethical discernment and clinical wisdom (33, 34). It seems that patients, as a starting point, see nurses as being competent and have trust in them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%