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Research Papers

Caring as sharing. Negotiating the moral boundaries of receiving care

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Pages 567-576 | Received 05 Oct 2018, Accepted 20 May 2019, Published online: 11 Jun 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Informal caregiving is increasingly considered a health care delivery-resource within the North European welfare states. While ‘informal’ often refers to non-professional, ‘caregiving’ connotes both affective concern (caring about) and practical action (caring for). This duality of meanings, however, often refers to the one direction in which care is given. Care, we suggest, is relational and also requires that people receiving care are able to or wanting to share their needs. Informal caregiving thus requires sharing. Based on 155 semi-structured, narrative interviews with people with lung or bowel cancer, living in Denmark, Sweden or England, this paper explores how and with whom people ‘share’ when they fall ill. We approach sharing as a heuristic for reflecting on informal-caregiving, and illustrate how being cared for or asking for care are entangled with the management of social risks and notions of selfhood. We conclude that informal caregiving should explicitly be recognised as morally and sympathetically committed practices, which attend to the diversity of local moral worlds of patients, their needs and experiences.

Acknowledgements

We wish to extend our thanks to all the informants as well as their families who made an effort to assist us with this research project. Also thanks to the advisory panel and wider project team members.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This publication presents independent research funded by The Research Centre for Cancer Diagnosis in Primary Care funded by The Danish Cancer Society and the Novo Nordic Foundation as part of a broader programme of work with partner countries. The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors, and not necessarily those of the funding partners.

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