Quality of death: a dimensional analysis of palliative care in the nursing home

RL Trotta - Journal of Palliative Medicine, 2007 - liebertpub.com
death, toward the dying experience, and that such a change in focus is necessary to achieve
palliative care in the … measures for the study of palliative care in nursing homes and outlines …

What is a 'secure base'when death is approaching? A study applying attachment theory to adult patients' and family members' experiences of palliative home care

A Milberg, R Wåhlberg, M Jakobsson… - Psycho …, 2012 - Wiley Online Library
… and/or become insecure/distressed because of the palliative care situation, I can approach
the palliative home care team; I will experience a sense of security as a result of proximity to …

Having to focus on doing rather than being—Nurse assistants' experience of palliative care in municipal residential care settings

I Beck, A Törnquist, L Broström, AK Edberg - International journal of nursing …, 2012 - Elsevier
Palliative care also meant having to face death and dying while feeling simultaneous that
it was unnatural to talk about death and having to deal with their own emotions. They …

Death without distress? The taboo of suffering in palliative care

N Streeck - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, 2020 - Springer
… The new experiences facing death will change who one is and what is important to him (…
concern to attach meaning to the seemingly meaningless experiences of suffering. In doing so, …

[HTML][HTML] Medical students' death anxiety: Severity and association with psychological health and attitudes toward palliative care

P Thiemann, T Quince, J Benson, D Wood… - Journal of pain and …, 2015 - Elsevier
… has a negative image 3 ; hence, the emotional reaction to death may be DA. Health care
professionals who experience intense fear of death may display behavioral responses such as …

Communication in palliative care: a practical guide

R Buckman - Death, Dying and Bereavement. 2nd edn. Sage …, 2000 - books.google.com
… We are likely to experience considerable discomfort simply by being in the same room as a
person who is going through the distress of facing death. This sympathetic pain may seem so …

Attitudes toward death, dying, end-of-life palliative care, and interdisciplinary practice in long term care workers

BS Leclerc, S Lessard, C Bechennec, E Le Gal… - Journal of the American …, 2014 - Elsevier
… Healthcare workers had a relatively positive attitude toward more than one-half of the selected
aspects of interdisciplinary practice and end-of-life palliative care for long-term residents. …

Palliative care for patients with cancer: district nurses' experiences

K Dunne, K Sullivan, G Kernohan - Journal of advanced nursing, 2005 - Wiley Online Library
death from life-limiting disease. The model for the delivery of palliative care and place of death
… nurse's experience of providing palliative care for patients with cancer and their families. …

“We never speak about death.” Healthcare professionals' views on palliative care for inpatients in Tanzania: A qualitative study

EG Lewis, LL Oates, J Rogathi… - Palliative & Supportive …, 2018 - cambridge.org
“We never speak about death.” Healthcare professionals’ views on palliative care for
inpatients in Tanzania: A qualitative Page 1 “We never speak about death.” Healthcare …

[HTML][HTML] Caring for dying and meeting death: experiences of Iranian and Swedish nurses

S Iranmanesh, K Axelsson, S Sävenstedt… - … of palliative care, 2010 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
care, their attitudes and behaviors become more important in the context of palliative care
where a variety of feelings and experiences are evoked in the face of death. Different views on …