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How specialist palliative care nurses identify patients with existential distress and manage their needs.

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BACKGROUND Existential distress is a term used when patients who are coming towards the end of their lives exhibit profound suffering, related particularly to their thoughts on life and existence.… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Existential distress is a term used when patients who are coming towards the end of their lives exhibit profound suffering, related particularly to their thoughts on life and existence. The clinical expression of this phenomenon has not been widely researched, and so specialist palliative care nurses were asked how they identify and manage this patient cohort. AIMS To explore how palliative-care nurses identify patients with existential distress and manage their needs. METHODS A qualitative descriptive design with thematic content analysis of transcribed interviews. FINDINGS Behavioural changes, agitation, social withdrawal and communication difficulties are identified as indicators of possible existential distress. Susceptible patient groups are identified. Nurses acknowledged that caring for patients with existential distress can be emotionally demanding. Being present and building relationships with patients are identified as enabling meaning-making. Sedation for refractory distress is seen as a last resort. CONCLUSION Early identification of existential distress by carers could enable timely intervention (counselling, psychotherapy and or spiritual guidance) to improve the patients' quality of life in the terminal phase of their illness and avoid intractable or refractory existential distress that may necessitate palliative sedation.

Keywords: care nurses; patients existential; existential distress; palliative care; manage

Journal Title: International journal of palliative nursing
Year Published: 2019

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