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Recognizing Spiritual Needs in People who are Dying

Recognizing Spiritual Needs in People who are Dying

9780198525110
442.26 zł
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Description
Listening carefully to patients at the end of life is at the heart of good palliative care and this book provides a means of recognizing and talking about spiritual needs even when religious language is not used. The author refers to this as a language of spirit. The book is based on interviews with patients who are dying and the language that they use to describe their experiences. It deals with death, dying, the experiences of patients and the relief of spiritual pain bylooking closely at patient stories, drawings and behaviour. The book explains why it is often easier to recognize than to explain spiritual issues. Part One explores the psychological, spiritual and theological interpretations of human experience. A detailed account is given of how the patients own stories were collected. Drawing on a broad literature which is grounded in patients words and deeds, Part Two introduces a non-religious language of spirit. Illuminated by patient art, Part Three shows what patients use this language to say abouttheir situation and how it is mediated through various metaphors. Part Four suggests ways of responding positively to patients spiritual needs. Aimed primarily at palliative care specialists and specialist nurses, this book will also appeal to health care chaplains, pastoral support workers, theologians, social researchers, and psychotherapists. The numerous illustrations, given by patients comments as they tell their story, make this book a truly fascinating journey through an important area of end of life care. Dame Cicely Saunders, OM, DBE, FRCP, Founder/President, St Christophers Hospice, London The emphasis on allowing patients to speak for themselves is striking... the author has presented the topic in a sensitive and refreshing way... I think this book will be well-received and it will be an important contribution to the literature of palliative care. Dr Odette Spruyt, Head of Pain and Palliative Care Department, Peter MacCallum Cancer Institute, East Melbourne, Australia
Product Details
OUP Oxford
84171
9780198525110
9780198525110

Data sheet

Publication date
2003
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
280
Dimensions (mm)
154 x 231
Weight (g)
442
  • Foreword; Introduction; Part One - Understanding spirituality - how far can story go?; How stories create and disclose meaning; Spirituality and psychology: stories with differing limits; Stories in the listening: collecting data; A story in the making: data analysis and interpretation; Part Two - Spiritual concerns expressed in non-religious ways; Features of a language of spirit; Part Three - Nine metaphors waiting to be recognised - how spirituality is mediated in the here and now; Patients sources of meaning and sense of self; Marginality and liminality - metaphors of the edge or the way?; Metaphors of control; Metaphors of letting go; Archetypal hero; Archetypal mother; Archetypal stranger; Recognising lifes surplus of meaning; Part Four - Implications for spiritual care; Some inconclusive reflections;
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