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Person‐centred care dialectics—Inquired in the context of palliative care
Authors:Joakim Öhlén RN  PhD  Sheryl Reimer‐Kirkham RN  PhD  Barbara Astle RN  PhD  Cecilia Håkanson RN  PhD  Joyce Lee PhD  Marjukka Eriksson MScN  RN  Richard Sawatzky RN  PhD
Institution:1. Institute of Health Care Sciences and University of Gothenburg Centre for Person‐Centred Care, Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden;2. Palliative Research Centre and Department of Health Care Sciences, Ersta Sk?ndal Br?cke University College, Stockholm, Sweden;3. School of Nursing, Trinity Western University, Langley, BC, Canada;4. Department of Nursing Science, Sophiahemmet University, Stockholm, Sweden;5. School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada;6. Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, St Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Abstract:Although a widely used concept in health care, person‐centred care remains somewhat ambiguous. In the field of palliative care, person‐centred care is considered a historically distinct ideal and yet there continues to be a dearth of conceptual clarity. Person‐centred care is also challenged by the pull of standardization that characterizes much of health service delivery. The conceptual ambiguity becomes especially problematic in contemporary pluralistic societies, particularly in the light of continued inequities in healthcare access and disparities in health outcomes. Our aim was to explicate premises and underlying assumptions regarding person‐centred care in the context of palliative care with an attempt to bridge the apparently competing agendas of individualization versus standardization, and individuals versus populations. By positioning person‐centredness in relation to the hermeneutics of the self according to Paul Ric?ur, dialectics between individualization and standardization, and between individuals and populations were constructed. The competing agendas were related in a dialectic manner in the way that population health is of importance for the individual, and standardization is of importance for the population. The analysis suggests that person‐centred care is an ethical stance, which gives prominence to both suffering and capability of the individual as a person. The dialectic analysis points towards the importance of extending person‐centred care to encompass population and societal perspectives and thereby avoiding a problematic tendency of affiliating person‐centred care with exclusively individualistic perspectives. Considerations for person‐centred palliative care on micro‐, meso‐ and macrolevels conclude the paper.
Keywords:end of life  family  hermeneutics  nursing philosophy  palliative care  patient  patient‐centred  person‐centred  public health nursing
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