安宁疗护姑息关怀故事中的大流行叙事:Covid-19对及时、全面关怀和生活质量理想的影响

IF 1.8 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
John I. MacArtney , Abi Eccles , Joanna Fleming , Catherine Grimley , Catriona Rachel Mayland , Sarah Mitchell , Shalene van Langen-Datta , Ruth Driscoll , Kathryn Almack , Jeremy Dale , Lynn Tatnell , Lesley Roberts
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景临终关怀姑息关怀旨在为身患绝症的患者提供及时的干预和全面的关怀,重点关注他们的生活质量。在Covid-19大流行的头两年,国家政治和医疗环境发生了重大变化。本文旨在探讨安宁疗护患者、照护者、员工和高级管理人员的故事,以确定不断变化的大流行叙事如何影响他们对安宁疗护姑息关怀作为及时、全面和支持生命质量的理解。研究结果我们在参与者关于大流行头两年安宁疗护姑息关怀支持的叙述中发现了四种 "大流行叙述"(反应、修正、复原力、(再)正常化)。在每个叙述中,我们探讨了Covid-19和相关的大流行指南如何影响了人们对生命质量的理解;在姑息关怀过程中,人们认为及时的关怀是如何改变的;以及随着安宁疗护和更广泛的医疗环境的变化,不同的整体关怀理念是如何得到强调的。 结论 这是首次将安宁疗护病人、关怀者、员工和高级管理人员关于Covid-19大流行头两年的故事放在一起进行分析。我们确定了大流行如何对安宁疗护姑息关怀的存在和可能带来了挑战。我们的研究结果表明,"与Covid共存 "将继续影响临终关怀姑息关怀的理想,即提供及时的关怀、全面的支持和高质量的生活。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pandemic narratives in stories about hospice palliative care: The impact of Covid-19 upon ideals of timely, holistic care and quality of life

Background

Hospice palliative care aims to provide timely interventions and holistic care that focusses on quality of life for people who are terminally ill. In the first two years of the Covid-19 pandemic the national political and healthcare contexts changed significantly. Throughout this time hospices had to repeatedly adjust their approach to supporting terminally ill people, many of whom were especially vulnerable to Covid-19.

Aim

The aim of this paper was to explore hospice patients, carers, staff and senior managers stories to identify how changing pandemic narratives affected their understanding of hospice palliative care as timely, holistic and supporting quality of life.

Methods

Narrative analysis of in-depth interviews with patients, carers, staff and senior managers (n = 70) recruited from hospices across the West-Midlands, UK, in 2020–22.

Findings

We identified four ‘pandemic narratives’ (reaction; revision; resilience; (re)normalisation) in the participants' accounts of hospice palliative care support in the first two years of the pandemic. In each narrative we explore how Covid-19 and the associated pandemic guidance affected what quality of life was understood to be; how what was considered to be timely care could change during the palliative care journey; and, how different ideas of holistic care were emphasised as the hospice and wider healthcare context changed.

Conclusion

This is the first-time stories about the first two-years of the Covid-19 pandemic from hospice patients, carers, staff and senior managers have been analysed together. We identified how the pandemic brought an existential challenge to ideas of what hospice palliative care is and could be. Our findings suggest that ‘living with covid’ will continue to affect hospice palliative care's ideals of timeliness of care, holistic support, and quality of life left.

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