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Research Papers

End-of-life conversation from both sides of the bed: voices of family and staff

, ORCID Icon &
Pages 2774-2783 | Received 31 May 2020, Accepted 08 Nov 2020, Published online: 21 Nov 2020
 

Abstract

Purpose

Prolonged living with chronic illness and disability expands the discussion of end-of-life conversation because of the complex role of intercommunication among patient, family, and healthcare staff. Little is known about such interaction from participants’ different perspectives. This qualitative case study examined end-of-life conversation among patient, family, and staff during long-term hospitalization in a neurological rehabilitation department.

Methods

After the patient’s death, 18 participants responded to in-depth semi-structured interviews: 16 healthcare staff and two family members (the patient’s wife and brother). In addition, we used the wife’s autoethnographic documentation of her experiences during end-of-life conversation.

Results

Thematic analysis produced three themes: (1) The Rehabilitation Department’s Mission – Toward Life or Death? (2) The Staff’s Perception of the Patient; (3) Containing Death: End-of-life Conversation from Both Sides of the Bed. These themes represented participants’ different perspectives in the intercommunication in overt and covert dialogues, which changed over time. Death’s presence–absence was expressed by movement between clinging to life and anticipating death.

Conclusion

The study findings emphasize the importance of practitioners’ training to accept and openly discuss death as an inseparable part of life-long disability, and the implementation of this stance during end-of-life care via sensitive conversations with patients and their families.

    IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION

  • It is vital for rehabilitation professionals to be trained to process and accept end-of-life issues as a natural and inseparable part of the life discourse among people with disabilities and their families.

  • Rehabilitation professionals need to acquire tools to grasp the spoken and unspoken issues related to life and death, and to communicate their impressions and understandings with people with disabilities and their families.

  • Rehabilitation professionals need to encourage an open dialogue when communicating with people with disabilities and their families on processes related to parting and death.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Professor Joanne Olson, Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Canada, and Professor Michal Granot, Department of Nursing, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel, for their valuable comments on an earlier drafts of this manuscript.

Ethical approval

Approval was obtained from The Chaim Sheba Medical Center’s review board (approval #3076-16-SMC) and the University of Haifa committee for ethical research with humans (approval #087/16). The procedures used in this study adhere to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki.

Informed consent

Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants, who agreed voluntarily to participate in the study and signed an informed consent form.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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