Abstract

This review aimed to summarize existing nursing literature to provide an overview of the extent, range, and nature of nurses' involvement in artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) at the end of life and to map the key concepts underpinning nurses' involvement in ANH. A scoping review was designed following the methodological framework guidelines of Arksey and O'Malley and the recommendations for advancing the methodology by Levac etal. An inductive qualitative content analysis was conducted according to the guidelines by Elo and Kyngäs. Thirty-nine articles were identified. Content analysis revealed 1 main category: "nurses' role in the decision-making process," with the 2 subcategories of "mediator" and "activator." The category and subcategories are influenced by the following generic categories: "being," "feeling," and "knowing," each of them constituted by 2 subcategories in their turn. Nurses perform the roles of activator and mediator. Their ability to establish good relationships and their attitudes enable the creation of teamwork and closeness to patients and family: relationships and attitudes are the subcategories of the "being" category. The category "feeling" represents the ways nurses experience the decision-making process, which can raise ethical and moral dilemmas and cause emotional responses. For these reasons, nurses have to create the right balance between personal-self and professional-self. The category "knowing" includes nurses' clinical and ethical knowledge about ANH. It emerges that deep clinical and ethical knowledge of ANH is necessary to provide consistent, adequate care at end of life.

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