The phenomenology of comfort
- 1 July 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 20 (1) , 189-195
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2648.1994.20010189.x
Abstract
From patient narratives, the phenomenological literature and reflection of patients' autobiographical accounts of illness, nine themes reflecting the phenomenological concept of corporeality were used to identify the ways patients achieve comfort The themes were the dis-eased body, the disobedient body, the vulnerable body, the violated body, the resigned body, the enduring body, the betraying body and the betraying (neurotic) mind The process of achieving comfort is based on the patients' needs to live with illness or injury without being dominated by their bodies The authors argue that while the role of nursing is to provide comfort to the sick, the goal of total comfort is unattainable in patient care However, if the goal is to enhance comfort, to ease and to relieve distress, comfort remains central to the role of nursingKeywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nature of comfort to hospitalized medical surgical patientsJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1993
- The Body's Insistence on Meaning: Metaphor as Presentation and Representation in Illness ExperienceMedical Anthropology Quarterly, 1992
- Relieving pain through ordinariness in nursingAdvances in Nursing Science, 1992
- Holistic comfortAdvances in Nursing Science, 1992
- ComfortClinical Nursing Research, 1992
- Comfort and the HOSPITALIZED CHRONICALLY ILLJournal of Gerontological Nursing, 1989
- A study of the comfort needs of patients with advanced cancerCancer Nursing, 1987
- Nursology of mouth care: preventing, comforting and seeking activities related to mouth careJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1983
- Nursing: The Philosophy and Science of CaringNursing Administration Quarterly, 1979
- Relaxation Technique to Increase Comfort Level of Postoperative PatientsNursing Research, 1978