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The Experiences of Family Members Witnessing the Diminishing Drinking of a Dying Relative in Hospital: A Narrative Inquiry

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The Experiences of Family Members Witnessing the Diminishing Drinking of a Dying Relative in Hospital: A Narrative Inquiry. / Pettifer, Annie.
Lancaster University, 2021. 249 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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Pettifer A. The Experiences of Family Members Witnessing the Diminishing Drinking of a Dying Relative in Hospital: A Narrative Inquiry. Lancaster University, 2021. 249 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1401

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@phdthesis{54b38a6f6d3c46018b148b2c974b8f63,
title = "The Experiences of Family Members Witnessing the Diminishing Drinking of a Dying Relative in Hospital: A Narrative Inquiry",
abstract = "AbstractBackgroundPalliative care aims to support the family members of people with life-threatening illnesses, alongside those who are ill. In the United Kingdom (UK), family members have expressed concern about the management of diminishing drinking and its consequences, particularly in the hospital environment, and the area is a priority for research. AimThis research aims to explore the experiences of family members when witnessing the diminishing drinking of a dying relative in order to identify areas in which professional support of family members might be improved. The exploration is framed within key notions of pragmatism as espoused by William James and John Dewey. Methodology and MethodThirteen family members who had witnessed diminishing drinking of a relative dying in hospital were recruited through the hospital bereavement service of one National Health Service trust in the UK. Their experiences were collected and analysed using narrative inquiry methodology, derived by Jean Clandinin and her colleagues from pragmatism. FindingsParticipants experienced diminishing drinking as an unfolding process which was part of overall decline associated with advancing illness. They all believed it to be detrimental. Three groups of responses were identified: promoting, accepting and ameliorating. Participants reported positive experiences of healthcare when staff actively supported relatives to drink, but they also found that staff could sometimes be too busy to attend to drinking. Tension occurred within families, and between healthcare staff and families over different approaches to managing aspiration risk and clinically assisted hydration. ConclusionThis thesis offers a unique understanding of family members{\textquoteright} experiences of diminishing drinking, which has the potential to inform new palliative endeavour in the field. It argues for a re-conceptualisation of diminishing drinking aligned to family members{\textquoteright} experiences; for supporting family members through listening to their experiences with insight, and for supporting their agency within the management of their relatives with diminishing drinking. The thesis also offers an exemplar of how palliative care might be framed and executed through a pragmatic lens, enabling appraisal of its value to wider palliative research.",
keywords = "pragmatism, narrative inquiry, drinking, fluid intake, dehydration, end of life care, palliative care, terminal care, family, caregiver, relative",
author = "Annie Pettifer",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "9",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1401",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The Experiences of Family Members Witnessing the Diminishing Drinking of a Dying Relative in Hospital

T2 - A Narrative Inquiry

AU - Pettifer, Annie

PY - 2021/7/9

Y1 - 2021/7/9

N2 - AbstractBackgroundPalliative care aims to support the family members of people with life-threatening illnesses, alongside those who are ill. In the United Kingdom (UK), family members have expressed concern about the management of diminishing drinking and its consequences, particularly in the hospital environment, and the area is a priority for research. AimThis research aims to explore the experiences of family members when witnessing the diminishing drinking of a dying relative in order to identify areas in which professional support of family members might be improved. The exploration is framed within key notions of pragmatism as espoused by William James and John Dewey. Methodology and MethodThirteen family members who had witnessed diminishing drinking of a relative dying in hospital were recruited through the hospital bereavement service of one National Health Service trust in the UK. Their experiences were collected and analysed using narrative inquiry methodology, derived by Jean Clandinin and her colleagues from pragmatism. FindingsParticipants experienced diminishing drinking as an unfolding process which was part of overall decline associated with advancing illness. They all believed it to be detrimental. Three groups of responses were identified: promoting, accepting and ameliorating. Participants reported positive experiences of healthcare when staff actively supported relatives to drink, but they also found that staff could sometimes be too busy to attend to drinking. Tension occurred within families, and between healthcare staff and families over different approaches to managing aspiration risk and clinically assisted hydration. ConclusionThis thesis offers a unique understanding of family members’ experiences of diminishing drinking, which has the potential to inform new palliative endeavour in the field. It argues for a re-conceptualisation of diminishing drinking aligned to family members’ experiences; for supporting family members through listening to their experiences with insight, and for supporting their agency within the management of their relatives with diminishing drinking. The thesis also offers an exemplar of how palliative care might be framed and executed through a pragmatic lens, enabling appraisal of its value to wider palliative research.

AB - AbstractBackgroundPalliative care aims to support the family members of people with life-threatening illnesses, alongside those who are ill. In the United Kingdom (UK), family members have expressed concern about the management of diminishing drinking and its consequences, particularly in the hospital environment, and the area is a priority for research. AimThis research aims to explore the experiences of family members when witnessing the diminishing drinking of a dying relative in order to identify areas in which professional support of family members might be improved. The exploration is framed within key notions of pragmatism as espoused by William James and John Dewey. Methodology and MethodThirteen family members who had witnessed diminishing drinking of a relative dying in hospital were recruited through the hospital bereavement service of one National Health Service trust in the UK. Their experiences were collected and analysed using narrative inquiry methodology, derived by Jean Clandinin and her colleagues from pragmatism. FindingsParticipants experienced diminishing drinking as an unfolding process which was part of overall decline associated with advancing illness. They all believed it to be detrimental. Three groups of responses were identified: promoting, accepting and ameliorating. Participants reported positive experiences of healthcare when staff actively supported relatives to drink, but they also found that staff could sometimes be too busy to attend to drinking. Tension occurred within families, and between healthcare staff and families over different approaches to managing aspiration risk and clinically assisted hydration. ConclusionThis thesis offers a unique understanding of family members’ experiences of diminishing drinking, which has the potential to inform new palliative endeavour in the field. It argues for a re-conceptualisation of diminishing drinking aligned to family members’ experiences; for supporting family members through listening to their experiences with insight, and for supporting their agency within the management of their relatives with diminishing drinking. The thesis also offers an exemplar of how palliative care might be framed and executed through a pragmatic lens, enabling appraisal of its value to wider palliative research.

KW - pragmatism, narrative inquiry, drinking, fluid intake, dehydration, end of life care, palliative care, terminal care, family, caregiver, relative

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1401

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1401

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -