Auckland Institute of Studies, Auckland, New Zealand.
School of Clinical Sciences, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Clin Nurs. 2020 Jun;29(11-12):1903-1912. doi: 10.1111/jocn.14701. Epub 2018 Nov 13.
To answer the question "What is the lived experience of hospitality during a patient's hospital stay for elective surgery?"
Hospitality centres on a host offering comfort to others, as in a personal care context. Caring constitutes the essence of what it is to be human, having a profound effect on well-being and recovery from surgery. Caring is one of the most elusive and diversely contested concepts in nursing; however, care provided by nurses seldom transcends as deep human connections and social utility. This study explored the nature, meaning and experience of hospitality as care from the perspective of elective surgery patients. Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative criteria were used.
A hermeneutic phenomenological methodology.
Data were gathered through semi-structured, face to face interviews with seven patients from both private and public hospitals, and from different cultural backgrounds.
Three interpretative notions were as follows: experiences of hospitality as feeling "really" cared for, being at ease and being healed. Hospitality exists in the receiver's lived experience, evoking a special moment which leads to feelings of great comfort and feelings of being truly cared about. When hospitality is received, patients feel a connection; they begin to trust and their healing begins.
The offering of often small, yet heartfelt acts of hospitality, indicated that nurses can evoke powerful lived experiences which benefit patients undergoing elective surgery.
The importance of prioritising emotional and social connections to the hospitality experience needs emphasis at all levels of the clinical structure. Hospitality as caring needs to form a part of all undergraduate and postgraduate nursing curricula, and ongoing professional development. The participant quotes presented in this article could form exemplars for the provision of hospitable nursing care practices, highlighting nurses getting to know and understand their patients, and being interested in their lives.
回答“在择期手术住院期间,患者的住院体验是什么?”这一问题。
hospitality 以主人为他人提供舒适为中心,如在个人护理环境中。关怀构成了人性的本质,对手术康复和幸福感有着深远的影响。关怀是护理中最难以捉摸和最具争议的概念之一;然而,护士提供的护理很少超越深刻的人际关系和社会效用。本研究从择期手术患者的角度探讨了 hospitality 作为关怀的本质、意义和体验。采用了定性研究的综合标准报告。
阐释现象学方法。
通过对来自私人和公立医院的 7 名不同文化背景的患者进行半结构化的面对面访谈收集数据。
提出了三个解释性概念:作为“真正”被关心的体验、舒适感和治愈感。hospitality 存在于接收者的生活体验中,唤起一个特殊的时刻,带来极大的舒适感和被关心的感觉。当 hospitality 被接收时,患者会感到一种联系;他们开始信任,他们的治疗开始。
提供经常是小而贴心的 hospitality 行为表明,护士可以唤起对接受择期手术的患者有益的强大生活体验。
需要在临床结构的各个层面强调将情感和社会联系优先考虑到 hospitality 体验中。关怀作为护理需要成为所有本科和研究生护理课程以及持续专业发展的一部分。本文中呈现的参与者引述可以成为提供好客护理实践的范例,突出护士了解和理解他们的患者,并对他们的生活感兴趣。