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  1. Person‐centred conversations in nursing and health: A theoretical analysis based on perspectives on communication.Joakim Öhlén & Febe Friberg - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (3):e12432.
    In this paper we use the concept of the person to examine person‐centred dialogue and show how person‐centred dialogue is different from and significantly more than transfer of information, which is the dominant notion in health care. A further motivation for the study is that although person‐centredness as an idea has a strong heritage in nursing and the broader healthcare discourse, person‐centred conversation is usually discussed as a distinct and unitary approach to communication, primarily related to the philosophy of dialogue—the (...)
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  • Mediating Consolation With Suicidal Patients.Fredricka Gilje & Anne-Grethe Talseth - 2007 - Nursing Ethics 14 (4):546-557.
    Psychiatric nurses frequently encounter suicidal patients. Caring for such patients often raises ethical questions and dilemmas. The research question for this study was: 'What understandings are revealed in texts about consolation and psychiatric nurses' responses to suicidal patients?' A Gadamerian approach guided re-interpretation of published texts. Through synthesizing four interpretive phases, a comprehensive interpretation emerged. This revealed being 'at home' with self, or an ethical way of being, as a hermeneutic understanding of a way to become ready to mediate consolation (...)
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  • The `Little Extra' That Alleviates Suffering.Maria Arman & Arne Rehnsfeldt - 2007 - Nursing Ethics 14 (3):372-386.
    Nursing, or caring science, is mainly concerned with developing knowledge of what constitutes ideal, good health care for patients as whole persons, and how to achieve this. The aim of this study was to find clinical empirical indications of good ethical care and to investigate the substance of ideal nursing care in praxis. A hermeneutic method was employed in this clinical study, assuming the theoretical perspective of caritative caring and ethics of the understanding of life. The data consisted of two (...)
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  • ‘The pine tree, my good friend’: The other as more‐than‐human.Eva Alerby & Åsa Engström - 2021 - Nursing Philosophy 22 (4):e12366.
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  • Caring for family members following suicide: Professionals’ experiences of responsibility.May Elise Vatne, Dagfinn Nåden & Vibeke Lohne - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (3):394-407.
    Background When a patient commits suicide while hospitalized in the psychiatric ward, the mental healthcare professionals (MHCPs) who have had the patient in their care encounter the family members immediately following the suicide. Professionals who encounter the bereaved in this first critical phase may have a significant impact on the grieving process. By providing ethically responsible and professionally competent care, they have the opportunity to influence what can alleviate and reduce suffering and promote health in a longer perspective. Aim The (...)
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  • Struggling to Become Ready for Consolation: experiences of suicidal patients.Anne-Grethe Talseth, Fredricka Gilje & Astrid Norberg - 2003 - Nursing Ethics 10 (6):614-623.
    Although there has been a vast amount of research about suicide, very few studies focus on the inner world of the suicidal patient. A secondary analysis of two exemplar narrative interviews with Norwegian patients reveals a glimpse of the inner world of suicidal patients’ longing for consolation. The results of a phenomenological hermeneutic study inspired by Ricoeur’s philosophy reveal five themes and one main theme. The themes are: ‘longing for closeness’, ‘desiring connectedness’, ‘struggling to open up inner dialogue’, ‘breaking into (...)
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  • Ricoeur’s hermeneutic arc and the “narrative turn” in the ethics of care.Maria Teresa Russo - 2021 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (3):443-452.
    Abstract“Patient-centred care” is the recent response to the malaise produced in the field of health care from the point of view both of a technical mentality and the paternalistic model. The interest in the story-telling approach shown by both the humanities and the social sciences has favoured a “narrative turn” in medicine too, where the new ethics of therapeutic relationship consider the hermeneutic method a means by which to integrate evidence and subjectivity, scientific data and patient experience. The aim of (...)
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  • Unburdening Suffering: Responses of Psychiatrists To Patients' Suicide Deaths.Anne-Grethe Talseth & Fredricka Gilje - 2007 - Nursing Ethics 14 (5):620-636.
    The research questions was: 'How do psychiatrists describe their responses to patients' suicidal deaths in the light of a published model of consolation?' The textual data (n = 5) was a subset of a larger (n = 19) study. Thematic analysis showed a main theme, 'unburdening grief', and six themes. Embedded in the results is a story about suffering that reveals that, through ethical reflectiveness, a meaning of suffering can be recreated that unburdens grief and opens up new understandings with (...)
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  • The meaning of dignity in nursing home care as seen by relatives.Arne Rehnsfeldt, Lillemor Lindwall, Vibeke Lohne, Britt Lillestø, Åshild Slettebø, Anne Kari T. Heggestad, Trygve Aasgaard, Maj-Britt Råholm, Synnøve Caspari, Bente Høy, Berit Sæteren & Dagfinn Nåden - 2014 - Nursing Ethics 21 (5):507-517.
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