Caring about dying persons and their families: Interpretation, practice and emotional labour

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Date
2018
Authors
Funk, Laura
Sheryl, Peters
Roger, Kerstin Steiber
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
The importance of emotional support for dying persons and their families has been well established, yet we know less about how care workers understand emotional processes related to death and dying, or how these understandings are connected to care practices and emotional labour at the end of life. The aim of this study was to explore how healthcare workers interpret and respond to emotional needs of dying persons and their families. Qualitative data were collected between 2013 and 2014 through in‐depth, in‐person interviews with 14 nurses and 12 healthcare aides in one Western Canadian city. Transcripts were analysed using an inductive, interpretive thematic coding approach and the analytic lens of emotional labour. Dominant interpretive frames of a “good death” informed participants' emotionally supportive practice. This included guiding patients and families to “open up” about their emotions to activate the grief process. There was concern that incomplete grieving would result in anger being directed towards care staff. The goal of promoting emotional sharing informed the work of “caring about.” Although palliative philosophies opened up moral and professional space for “caring about” in the context of organisational norms which often discouraged these practices, the tension between the two, and the lack of time for this work, may encourage surface expressions rather than authentic emotional care.
Description
Keywords
Death and dying; emotional support; paid care work; palliative care; emotion work; interpretive research
Citation
Funk, L., Peters, S., & Roger, K.S. (2018). Caring about dying persons and their families: Interpretation, practice and emotional labour. Health and Social Care in the Community, 26, 519–26. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12559