Abstract
This study described who the older patient undergoing surgery is as part of the perioperative dialogue and in order to understand their needs. The study used a hermeneutical design. Data were 54 transcribed stories from perioperative dialogues. The findings show that older patients undergoing surgery were persons: (a) with memories of the life they had lived, (b) whose body had betrayed them, (c) who were worried and afraid before the operation, and (d) who will need help from family and friends. The older patient is a unique human being, a wholeness with a past of their own and a life they have lived: the present – a time of change and the future – a time for recovery.
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