42,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
payback
21 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Increasing numbers of elderly are dying at home. Nurses continually illuminate choices for clients who walk the path of terminal illness yet are unaware of the meaning of dying at home for the client. This study is the first to identify the lived experience of dying at home.Participants were 10 white males, 67-83 yrs old,with a mean education of 9 yrs, diagnosed as terminally ill, in Hospice care, Ohio residents and were willing to share the meaning of dying at home. Sample size was determined by redundancy of information.Parse's research methodology was used to analyze the unstructured,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Increasing numbers of elderly are dying at home. Nurses continually illuminate choices for clients who walk the path of terminal illness yet are unaware of the meaning of dying at home for the client. This study is the first to identify the lived experience of dying at home.Participants were 10 white males, 67-83 yrs old,with a mean education of 9 yrs, diagnosed as terminally ill, in Hospice care, Ohio residents and were willing to share the meaning of dying at home. Sample size was determined by redundancy of information.Parse's research methodology was used to analyze the unstructured, videotaped interviews held every other week in the participant's home from the initiation of the study until death ensued. Common themes were identified and analyzed for level of congruency with the structure and concepts of Parse's theory of Human Becoming. The structural definition of dying at home for the sample was struggling with loss of self amidst gaining/losing vitality through interchange with cherished others and changing perspective of the world, hopes and dreams. A must-have book for professional and nonprofessional cargivers of the dying patient.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
graduate from Texas Woman''s University with a Ph D. Dr Lynd is an End-of-life Nursing Consortium Trainer and was in the first group of trainers to be selected in the USA. Has taught all levels of nursing as a university professor and she retired from Wright State University this year. Her research focus is transitions of the elderly.