Drawing on qualitative interviews with patients near death, in this article we explore people’s experiences of living and dying in a hospice in-patient unit. The results illustrate the tensions and complexities of entering into the hospice environment and how its character (i.e. people, interactions and spaces) shapes experiences near death. The results illustrate the hospice in-patient unit as playing a vitally important role in supporting the end of life, but also, the unique challenges this environment presents to individual well-being. Key themes emergent from the interviews were: loss of self and identity nostalgia; liminality and the home/help dialectic; and the performative elements of dying. To explore and unpack these processes, we...
The overall hospice philosophy is to provide care that enhances a dying person’s quality of life. Mo...
This study explored the views of patients, carers and staff within one UK hospice on talking about p...
In the three decades since the concept of "awareness" was introduced to describe the nature of commu...
The end of life is a highly emotive and critical period in the life course and families often play a...
Palliative care involves dynamic relationships among clients, their families, and professionals, all...
Living in a hospice department is an intense experience for patients, caregivers, and healthcare pro...
© 2016 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness. Home is frequently idealised as the preferr...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end-of-life care, while in-patient hospit...
Abstract Background The experiences of people with cancer and organ disease have been described acro...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end‐of‐life care, while in‐patient hospit...
Around 125,000 people volunteer in hospices each year in the UK, and due to the predicted increase i...
In the three decades since the concept of “awareness” was introduced to describe the nature of commu...
One of the central achievement of the American hospice movement was to shift the place of death from...
Living close to death means an inevitable confrontation with one’s own existential limitation. In th...
Delirium is a disturbance of consciousness and cognition that affects many terminally ill patients b...
The overall hospice philosophy is to provide care that enhances a dying person’s quality of life. Mo...
This study explored the views of patients, carers and staff within one UK hospice on talking about p...
In the three decades since the concept of "awareness" was introduced to describe the nature of commu...
The end of life is a highly emotive and critical period in the life course and families often play a...
Palliative care involves dynamic relationships among clients, their families, and professionals, all...
Living in a hospice department is an intense experience for patients, caregivers, and healthcare pro...
© 2016 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness. Home is frequently idealised as the preferr...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end-of-life care, while in-patient hospit...
Abstract Background The experiences of people with cancer and organ disease have been described acro...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end‐of‐life care, while in‐patient hospit...
Around 125,000 people volunteer in hospices each year in the UK, and due to the predicted increase i...
In the three decades since the concept of “awareness” was introduced to describe the nature of commu...
One of the central achievement of the American hospice movement was to shift the place of death from...
Living close to death means an inevitable confrontation with one’s own existential limitation. In th...
Delirium is a disturbance of consciousness and cognition that affects many terminally ill patients b...
The overall hospice philosophy is to provide care that enhances a dying person’s quality of life. Mo...
This study explored the views of patients, carers and staff within one UK hospice on talking about p...
In the three decades since the concept of "awareness" was introduced to describe the nature of commu...