“What it is like to be human”: The existential dimension of care as perceived by professionals caring for people approaching death

Author:

Bäckersten CarlORCID,Molander UllaORCID,Benkel IngerORCID,Nyblom StinaORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Existential/spiritual questions often arise when a person suffers from a serious and/or life-threatening illness. “Existential” can be seen as a broad inclusive term for issues surrounding people’s experience and way of thinking about life. To be able to meet patients’ existential needs, knowledge is needed about what the existential dimension includes. The aim of this study was to investigate how professionals caring for people with life-threatening disease perceive the existential dimension of care. Methods This study is based on a mixed method design utilizing a digital survey with open- and closed-ended questions. Descriptive statistics were applied to closed-ended questions and a qualitative descriptive approach was used for the responses to the open-ended questions. Healthcare professionals at specialized palliative care units, an oncology clinic and municipal healthcare within home care and a nursing home in Sweden answered the survey. Results Responses from 77 professionals expressed a broad perspective on existential questions such as thoughts about life and death. Identifying existential needs and performing existential care was considered a matter of attitude and responsiveness and thus a possible task for any professional. Existential needs centered around the opportunity to communicate, share thoughts and experiences, and be seen and heard. Existential care was connected to communication, sharing moments in the present without doing anything and was sometimes described as embedded in professionals’ ordinary care interventions. The existential dimension was considered important by the majority of respondents. Significance of results This study indicates that with the right attitude and responsiveness, all professionals can potentially contribute to existential care, and that existential care can be embedded in all care. The existential dimension of care can also be considered very important by health professionals in a country that is considered secular.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine,General Nursing

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