Faculty of Health and Society, University of Northampton, Northampton, UK.
School of Life Science, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Psychooncology. 2019 Nov;28(11):2201-2209. doi: 10.1002/pon.5208. Epub 2019 Sep 2.
Knowledge about how people make meaning in cancer, palliative, and end-of-life care is particularly lacking in Africa, yet it can provide insights into strategies for improving palliative care (PC). This study explored ways in which cancer patients, their families, and health care professionals (HCPs) construct meaning of their life-limiting illnesses and how this impact on provision and use of PC in a Nigerian hospital.
This ethnographic study utilised participant observation, informal conversations during observation, and interviews to gather data from 39 participants, comprising service users and HCPs in a Nigerian hospital. Data were analysed using Spradley's framework for ethnographic data analysis.
Meaning-making in life-limiting illness was predominantly rooted in belief systems. Most patients and their families, including some HCPs, perceived that cancer was caused by the devil, mystical, or supernatural beings. They professed that these agents manifested in the form of either spiritual attacks or that wicked people in society used either poison or acted as witches/wizards to inflict cancer on someone. These beliefs contributed to either nonacceptance of, or late presentation for, PC by most of patients and their families, while some professionals depended on supernatural powers for divine intervention and tacitly supporting religious practices to achieve healing/cure.
Findings revealed that cultural and religious world views about life-limiting illnesses were used in decision-making process for PC. This, therefore, provided evidence that could improve the clinicians' cultural competence when providing PC to individuals of African descent, especially Nigerians, both in Nigerian societies and in foreign countries.
在非洲,人们对癌症、姑息治疗和临终关怀的意义构建知之甚少,但这可以为改善姑息治疗(PC)策略提供一些思路。本研究探讨了癌症患者、他们的家属和医疗保健专业人员(HCPs)如何构建生命有限疾病的意义,以及这如何影响尼日利亚医院的 PC 提供和使用。
这项民族志研究采用参与者观察、观察期间的非正式对话和访谈,从尼日利亚医院的服务使用者和 HCPs 中收集了 39 名参与者的数据。数据使用斯普拉德利的民族志数据分析框架进行分析。
生命有限疾病的意义构建主要根植于信仰体系。大多数患者及其家属,包括一些 HCPs,认为癌症是由魔鬼、神秘或超自然生物引起的。他们声称这些因素表现为精神攻击,或者社会上的邪恶之人使用毒药或充当女巫/巫师来给某人带来癌症。这些信念导致大多数患者及其家属要么不接受 PC,要么很晚才接受 PC,而一些专业人员则依赖超自然力量来获得神圣干预,并默许支持宗教实践以实现治愈/康复。
研究结果表明,关于生命有限疾病的文化和宗教世界观被用于 PC 的决策过程。因此,这为在提供 PC 时提高临床医生对非洲裔个体的文化能力提供了证据,尤其是尼日利亚人,无论是在尼日利亚社会还是在国外。