Parental agency in pediatric palliative care

Article indépendant

SZABAT, Marta

The study discusses a new approach to parental agency in pediatric palliative care based on an active form of caregiving. It also explores the possibility of a positive conceptualization of parental agency in its relational context. The paper begins with an illustrative case study based on a clinical situation. This is followed by an analysis of various aspects of parental agency based on empirical studies that disclose the insufficiencies of the traditional approach to parental agency. In the next step, parental agency is analyzed from a reality-based perspective as an activity focused on relationships and the cognitive capacity of parents vis-a-vis their seriously ill children. The paper also considers the importance of the cultural and social contexts in which parental agency and decision-making take place. This agency is addressed not as individualistic in form, and nor is it exercised in terms of fixed choices. Rather, the focus is on its dynamic and future-oriented aspects. Consequently, parental agency should be comprehended not only as a form of proxy agency representing the child's best interests but also as a complex decision-making process in which the parents learn from their child how to become good, compassionate caregivers and at the same time good parents.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nin.12594

Voir la revue «Nursing inquiry»

Autres numéros de la revue «Nursing inquiry»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Shades of hope : Marcel's notion of hope in e...

Article | SZABAT, Marta | Medicine, health care, and philosophy

This article examines the compatibility and relevance of Gabriel Marcel's phenomenology of hope in interdisciplinary research on the role of hope in end-of-life (EOL) care. Our analysis is divided into three thematic topics which ...

Shades of hope : Marcel's notion of hope in e...

Article indépendant | SZABAT, Marta | Medicine, health care, and philosophy

This article examines the compatibility and relevance of Gabriel Marcel's phenomenology of hope in interdisciplinary research on the role of hope in end-of-life (EOL) care. Our analysis is divided into three thematic topics which ...

Parental agency in pediatric palliative care

Article | SZABAT, Marta | Nursing inquiry

The study discusses a new approach to parental agency in pediatric palliative care based on an active form of caregiving. It also explores the possibility of a positive conceptualization of parental agency in its relational contex...

De la même série

Relational ethics of delirium care : findings...

Article indépendant | WRIGHT, David Kenneth | Nursing inquiry

Delirium, a common syndrome in terminally ill people, presents specific challenges to a good death in end-of-life care. This paper examines the relational engagement between hospice nurses and their patients in a context of end-of...

Explorations of disgust : a narrative inquiry...

Article indépendant | KAISER, Mara | Nursing inquiry

While feelings of disgust and repulsion are experienced and accepted as part of care practices of nurses who work in palliative care, they are often silenced. Working alongside two palliative care nurses in a hospice setting, we e...

Religious observance and perceptions of end-o...

Article indépendant | TARABEIH, Mahdi | Nursing inquiry

This study examines the impact of the level of religious observance on the attitudes toward end-of-life (EOL) decisions and euthanasia of Jews in Israel-where euthanasia is illegal-as compared to Jews living in the USA, in the sta...

Beyond technology, drips, and machines : mora...

Article indépendant | GAGNON, Michelle | Nursing inquiry

Moral distress is an experience of profound moral compromise with deeply impactful and potentially long-term consequences to the individual. Critical care areas are fraught with ethical issues, and end-of-life care has been associ...

Norwegian nurses' perceptions of assisted dyi...

Article indépendant | HOL, Hege | Nursing inquiry

This study explores the perceptions of Norwegian nurses who have received assisted dying requests from terminally ill patients. Assisted dying is illegal in Norway, while in some countries, it is an option. Nurses caring for termi...

Chargement des enrichissements...