The patient’s perceived caring needs as a message of suffering
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 28 (5) , 978-987
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.1998.00822.x
Abstract
The aim of the study was to arrive at a deeper understanding of the patient's experience of caring needs, that is, of problems, needs and desires, by investigating and explaining how these will be expressed and shaped in the caring relation and to illuminate its implications for caring. The target population consisted of 38 patients in a medical ward and 37 patients in a surgical ward in a central hospital in Western Finland. The patients were interviewed in the wards and asked about perceived caring needs. By means of a hermeneutical process of interpretation a pattern emerged which was interpreted as pictures of themselves and of the nurses. These types of patients fell into three groups: the satisfied, the complaining and satisfied, and the complaining and dissatisfied patients. The types of nurses were divided into the competent and friendly, the competent and contact-creating and the competent and courageous. The patients' caring needs can be interpreted and understood from the standpoint of their experience of suffering, but also in relation to their experience of pleasure and comfort. The most conspicuous caring needs were experiencing confidence in the competence of the nurses, comfort, guidance, dialogue and closeness, which the patients expressed as problems, needs and desires. The patients' caring needs can contain new possibilities of growth and development. The nurse can relieve patients' suffering by promoting their experience of comfort. If the nurses' view of the limits of reality are extended to comprise the existential/ spiritual dimension of human beings as well, new possibilities will emerge of interpreting and understanding patients' caring needs as a message of suffering.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Teaching spiritual care to nursesNurse Education Today, 1996
- A selective review of the literature on nurse‐patient communication: has the patient's contribution been neglected'Journal of Advanced Nursing, 1995
- A motivational approach to confirmation: An interpretation of dysphagic patients' experiencesTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics, 1994
- A theory of holistic comfort for nursingJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1994
- To understand and alleviate suffering in a caring cultureJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1993
- Suffering: a relatively unexplored phenomenon among family caregivers of non‐institutionalized patients with cancerJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1992
- Promoting Health by Promoting ComfortNursing Forum, 1992
- The Human Needs Model of NursingJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1986
- Human Needs and Holistic Nursing PracticeJournal of Holistic Nursing, 1986
- A model for nursing and nursologyJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1976