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- Title
Palliative care of First Nations people: a qualitative study of bereaved family members.
- Authors
Kelly L; Linkewich B; Cromarty H; St Pierre-Hansen N; Antone I; Gilles C; Kelly, Len; Linkewich, Barb; Cromarty, Helen; St Pierre-Hansen, Natalie; Antone, Irwin; Giles, Chris; Gilles, Chris
- Abstract
<bold>Objective: </bold>To understand cross-cultural hospital-based end-of-life care from the perspective of bereaved First Nations family members.<bold>Design: </bold>Phenomenologic approach using qualitative in-depth interviews.<bold>Setting: </bold>A rural town in northern Ontario with a catchment of 23 000 Ojibway and Cree aboriginal patients.<bold>Participants: </bold>Ten recently bereaved aboriginal family members.<bold>Methods: </bold>Semi-structured interviews were conducted, audiotaped, and transcribed. Data were analyzed using crystallization and immersion techniques. Triangulation and member-checking methods were used to ensure trustworthiness.<bold>Main Findings: </bold>First Nations family members described palliative care as a community and extended family experience. They expressed the need for rooms and services that reflect this, including space to accommodate a larger number of visitors than is usual in Western society. Informants described the importance of communication strategies that involve respectful directness. They acknowledged that all hospital employees had roles in the care of their loved ones. Participants generally described their relatives' relationships with nurses and the care the nurses provided as positive experiences.<bold>Conclusion: </bold>Cross-cultural care at the time of death is always challenging. Service delivery and communication strategies must meet cultural and family needs. Respect, communication, appropriate environments, and caregiving were important to participants for culturally appropriate palliative care.
- Subjects
ONTARIO; FAMILIES &; psychology; BEREAVEMENT; CULTURE; EMPATHY; FAMILIES; FIRST Nations of Canada; PALLIATIVE treatment; PHYSICIAN-patient relations; QUESTIONNAIRES; RURAL population; SURVEYS; QUALITATIVE research; MEDICAL care of indigenous peoples; ATTITUDES toward death; FAMILY relations
- Publication
Canadian Family Physician / Médecin de Famille Canadien, 2009, Vol 55, Issue 4, p394
- ISSN
0008-350X
- Publication type
journal article