The living experience of surviving out‐of‐hospital cardiac arrest and spiritual meaning making

Author:

Aristidou Maria1,Karanikola Maria2,Kusi‐Appiah Elizabeth3,Koutroubas Anna2,Pant Usha3ORCID,Vouzavali Foteini4,Lambrinou Ekaterini2,Papathanassoglou Elizabeth35

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing European University Cyprus Nicosia Cyprus

2. Department of Nursing Cyprus University of Technology Limassol Cyprus

3. Faculty of Nursing University of Alberta, Edmonton Clinic Health Academy (ECHA) Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Faculty of Nursing National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Athens Greece

5. Neurosciences Rehabilitation & Vision Strategic Clinical Network™ Edmonton Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractAimTo understand the meaning of surviving out of hospital cardiac arrest and its aftereffects among Greek‐speaking survivors.DesignHermeneutical phenomenological method based on Martin Heidegger's philosophy.MethodsEight Greek‐speaking out of hospital cardiac arrest survivors were recruited using purposive sampling method. Data collection and analysis using the seven stages of hermeneutic analysis described by Diekelman. Data were collected through semi‐structured personal interviews with open‐ended questions.ResultsAnalysis revealed five themes: ‘The unexpected attack’, ‘Experiencing a different world: Transformation of Body, Time, Emotion and Sensation’, ‘Restoration of the re‐embodied self’, ‘Life transformation’ and ‘Personal transformation’. The themes are commensurate with transcultural components of Near‐Death Experiences. Surviving out of hospital cardiac arrest was perceived as a ‘divine gift’ and a chance to continue ‘living in a more conscious and meaningful way’. Despite participants' physical and psychosocial challenges, the narratives highlighted a newly acquired deep appreciation for the joy of life, living and others. Construction of meaning and a heightened spirituality seem central in reconstructing life after out of hospital cardiac arrest survivors.Patient or Public ContributionOut of hospital cardiac arrest survivors reflected and described in‐depth on their lived experiences of out of hospital cardiac arrest through a 60‐ to 90‐min interview. In addition, the participants provided their feedback on the interpretation of the findings, confirmed the study findings, and ensured that the analysis reflected aspects of their individual experiences and were true to them.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

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4. The body and the soul in Homer, the Orphics, Heraclitus, Pythagoras and Socrates from the critical standpoint of philosophy and sports pedagogy;Bekiari A.;Studies in Physical Culture and Tourism,2009

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