On comfort in palliative care.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES Health Sociology Review Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-30 DOI:10.1080/14461242.2024.2447021
Emma Kirby, Rebecca McLaughlan, Frances Bellemore, Robyn Swanson, Julie Gissing, Richard Chye
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Abstract

ABSTRACTComfort is a central aspect of palliative care, encompassing the management of pain and symptoms, as well as how people feel and experience care. Comfort has been argued to be especially tenuous or transient in palliative care, as a constantly shifting set of bodily sensations and relations are anticipated and cared for. In this article, drawing on in-depth interviews and photo elicitation, we explore the accounts of patients, family carers, staff and volunteers from a palliative care service in Australia, to understand how care is configured and facilitated through everyday gestures of comfort. We unpack how comfort (and comforting) is understood, sought, and done, to reveal how it is experienced as a set of social, relational, processual, and dynamic relations between bodies and environments. Our findings reveal how comfort for those nearing the end of life and those who care for them is brought about variously in the familiarity and reliability of things and surroundings, as well as through gestures of intimacy, recognition, and flexibility. We find that while predominantly considered as intentional and momentary, comfort has lasting effects. These lingering affective resonances, we argue, are key to recognising the diversity of what matters to people in palliative care.

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关于姑息关怀中的舒适。
舒适是姑息治疗的一个核心方面,包括疼痛和症状的管理,以及人们如何感受和体验护理。人们一直认为,在姑息治疗中,舒适是特别脆弱或短暂的,因为一组不断变化的身体感觉和关系是预期和照顾的。在这篇文章中,我们通过深度访谈和照片提取,探讨了澳大利亚姑息治疗服务的患者、家庭护理人员、工作人员和志愿者的账户,以了解如何通过日常舒适的手势配置和促进护理。我们揭示了舒适(和安慰)是如何被理解、寻求和完成的,以揭示它是如何作为身体和环境之间的一系列社会、关系、过程和动态关系而被体验的。我们的研究结果揭示了,对那些接近生命尽头的人以及照顾他们的人来说,他们对事物和环境的熟悉程度和可靠性,以及亲密、认可和灵活性的手势,是如何带来舒适度的。我们发现,虽然舒适主要被认为是有意的和短暂的,但它有持久的影响。我们认为,这些挥之不去的情感共鸣是认识到姑息治疗中对人们重要的多样性的关键。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: An international, scholarly peer-reviewed journal, Health Sociology Review explores the contribution of sociology and sociological research methods to understanding health and illness; to health policy, promotion and practice; and to equity, social justice, social policy and social work. Health Sociology Review is published in association with The Australian Sociological Association (TASA) under the editorship of Eileen Willis. Health Sociology Review publishes original theoretical and research articles, literature reviews, special issues, symposia, commentaries and book reviews.
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