Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1076296 International Journal of Nursing Studies 2013 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundWhile knowledge on factors affecting personal dignity of patients nearing death is quite substantial, far less is known about how patients living with a serious disease understand dignity.ObjectiveTo develop a conceptual model of dignity that illuminates the process by which serious illness can undermine patients’ dignity, and that is applicable to a wide patient population.DesignQualitative interview study.Participants34 patients with either cancer, early stage dementia, or a severe chronic illness were selected from an extensive cohort study into advance directives.MethodIn-depth interviews were carried out exploring the experiences of seriously ill patients with regard to their personal dignity. The interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis and a conceptual model was constructed based on the resulting themes.ResultsWe developed a two-step dignity model of illness. According to this model, illness related conditions do not affect patients’ dignity directly but indirectly by affecting the way patients perceive themselves. We identified three components shaping self-perception: (a) the individual self: the subjective experiences and internally held qualities of the patient; (b) the relational self: the self within reciprocal interaction with others; and, (c) the societal self: the self as a social object in the eyes of others.ConclusionsThe merits of the model are two-folded. First, it offers an organizing framework for further research into patients’ dignity. Secondly, the model can serve to facilitate care for seriously ill patients in practice by providing insight into illness and dignity at the level of the individual patient where intervention can be effectively targeted.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
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