Publication | Open Access
Lack of Truth-Telling in Palliative Care and Its Effects among Nurses and Nursing Students
35
Citations
23
References
2020
Year
Palliative CareNursingPrimary CareCancer LiteracyMental Health NursingEnd-of-life CareHealth CommunicationEnd-of-life IssueInauspicious PrognosesNursing ResearchNursing StudentsTerminal IllnessCommunicationUnclear CommunicationArtsMedicineHospice
Unclear communication of inauspicious prognoses may disorientate both patients and their relatives, drastically jeopardizing the planning of palliative care. This paper considers the issue of truth-telling in the communicative problems of nurses and students of nursing with terminally ill patients. The fundamental objective is the analysis of the difficulties related to the lack of truth-telling and how it might impact their professional and personal lives. A qualitative study was realized, involving 47 participants, both nurses (25) and nursing students (22), working in palliative care units or in associations of volunteers for the assistance of oncological patients. The exploration was focused on the way they relate to patients who are not aware of their real health conditions and their consequences. Particular attention was paid to their opinions concerning what could be done in order to manage such problematic situations in the near future.
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