Abstract

Aims and objectivesThe aim was to explore how nurses experience compassionate care for patients with cancer and family caregivers in different phases of the palliative pathway.BackgroundCompassion is fundamental to palliative care and viewed as a cornerstone of high‐quality care provision. Healthcare authorities emphasize that patients should have the opportunity to stay at home for as long as possible. There are, however, care deficiencies in the palliative pathway.DesignThis study employed a qualitative design using focus groups and a hermeneutic approach.MethodsFour focus groups with three to seven female nurses in each group were conducted in Mid‐Norway in 2018. Nurses’ ages ranged from 28–60 years (mean age = 45 years), and they were recruited through purposive sampling (N = 21). Compassionate care was chosen as the theoretical framework. Reporting followed the COREQ guidelines.ResultsThree themes expressing compassionate care related to different phases of the pathway were identified: (a) information and dialogue, (b) creating a space for dying and (c) family caregivers’ acceptance of death.ConclusionsThis study showed that it was crucial to create a space for dying, characterized by trust, collaboration, good relationships, empathy, attention, silence, caution, slowness, symptom relief and the absence of noise and conflict.Relevance to clinical practiceThe quality of compassion possessed by individual practitioners, as well as the overall design of the healthcare system, must be considered when creating compassionate care for patients and their family caregivers. Nursing educators and health authorities should pay attention to the development of compassion in education and practice. Further research should highlight patients’ and family caregivers’ experiences of compassionate care and determine how healthcare systems can support compassionate care.

Highlights

  • Compassion is fundamental to palliative care and can create an environment of safety for patients and family caregivers

  • Compassionate care is built on trust and good relationships between the patient, the family and healthcare personnel (Brito-Pons & Librada-Flores, 2018; Larkin, 2016)

  • We explore nurses’ experiences of compassionate care for patients and family caregivers in the palliative pathway

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Summary

Introduction

Compassion is fundamental to palliative care and can create an environment of safety for patients and family caregivers. We followed a broad description of compassion as involving an awareness of, or a sensitivity to, the pain or suffering of others that results in taking verbal, nonverbal or physical action to remove, reduce or alleviate the impact of such affliction (Gilbert, 2013). This description is relevant because research has shown that patients and their family caregivers experience deficiencies in palliative care provision (McEwen et al, 2018; Røen et al, 2018; Tarberg et al, 2019). Compassion is not just about individual responses, but rather about how nurses are enabled by the system to sustain and support themselves in the complexity of palliative care (Larkin, 2016)

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