Department of Biobehavioral Health Science, College of Nursing, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, USA.
Department of Global Cooperation, National Health Insurance Service, Wonju, Republic of Korea.
Omega (Westport). 2022 Mar;84(4):1025-1044. doi: 10.1177/0030222820921586. Epub 2020 May 12.
Few studies of death preparation in South Korea are available. This article describes South Koreans' experiences of death and a funeral in a hospital setting to improve health care providers' ability to care for dying patients and their family. Using Colaizzi's phenomenological method, we conducted semistructured interviews with 40 South Koreans who had lost a family member in a hospital setting. Participants' statements were classified into 12 themes, 5 theme clusters, and 3 categories: (a) vagueness of funeral culture, (b) distortion of meaning in funeral culture, and (c) the need to prepare for death and process grief. Our findings are relevant to hospital-based health care providers who care for dying patients and their family. Targeted educational information could help health care providers better serve patients and family. Policy changes could improve quality of care by allowing health care providers to transition with the family from hospital units to a hospital-based funeral setting.
韩国关于死亡准备的研究甚少。本文描述了韩国人在医院环境中的死亡和葬礼体验,以提高医疗保健提供者照顾临终患者及其家属的能力。本研究采用科莱齐的现象学方法,对 40 名在医院环境中失去亲人的韩国人进行了半结构式访谈。参与者的陈述被分为 12 个主题、5 个主题群和 3 个类别:(a) 葬礼文化的模糊性,(b) 葬礼文化中意义的扭曲,以及(c) 对死亡准备和悲伤处理的需求。我们的研究结果与照顾临终患者及其家属的医院为基础的医疗保健提供者有关。有针对性的教育信息可以帮助医疗保健提供者更好地为患者及其家属服务。政策的改变可以通过允许医疗保健提供者从医院病房过渡到医院内的葬礼环境,来提高护理质量。