Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers

Singapore is facing major demographic shifts towards population aging and is confronted with increasing demands for the provision of holistic palliative care. The Government and Ministry of health have honorably aspired to promote care that could support the dignity of dying patients and their famil...

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Main Author: Tan, Jun Hao
Other Authors: Ho Hau Yan Andy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77239
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-772392019-12-10T14:01:24Z Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers Tan, Jun Hao Ho Hau Yan Andy School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Singapore is facing major demographic shifts towards population aging and is confronted with increasing demands for the provision of holistic palliative care. The Government and Ministry of health have honorably aspired to promote care that could support the dignity of dying patients and their families at the end-of-life. However, most palliative services offered locally still remain heavily medically-oriented, emphasizing largely on symptom and pain management, and less on the psychosocial-spiritual concerns of the dying. Furthermore, there continues to be a notable lack of empirically-based, non-pharmacological, structured dignity enhancing interventions in Singapore. In this qualitative study, the effects of a novel Family Dignity Intervention (FDI) devised by Ho and colleagues (2017) was explored. Through in-depth interviews, FDI was found to have fostered dignity-enhancing outcomes across five different domains. These include process, social and emotional outcomes that were attained by both patients and caregivers, as well as specific spiritual and post bereavement outcomes that were achieved by patients and caregivers respectively. The findings of this study also revealed the process of how various FDI outcomes were fostered, and highlights the significance of family involvement, heartfelt disclosure and life reminiscence to local patients and families in palliative end-of-life care. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2019-05-21T13:34:55Z 2019-05-21T13:34:55Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77239 en 51 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Tan, Jun Hao
Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
description Singapore is facing major demographic shifts towards population aging and is confronted with increasing demands for the provision of holistic palliative care. The Government and Ministry of health have honorably aspired to promote care that could support the dignity of dying patients and their families at the end-of-life. However, most palliative services offered locally still remain heavily medically-oriented, emphasizing largely on symptom and pain management, and less on the psychosocial-spiritual concerns of the dying. Furthermore, there continues to be a notable lack of empirically-based, non-pharmacological, structured dignity enhancing interventions in Singapore. In this qualitative study, the effects of a novel Family Dignity Intervention (FDI) devised by Ho and colleagues (2017) was explored. Through in-depth interviews, FDI was found to have fostered dignity-enhancing outcomes across five different domains. These include process, social and emotional outcomes that were attained by both patients and caregivers, as well as specific spiritual and post bereavement outcomes that were achieved by patients and caregivers respectively. The findings of this study also revealed the process of how various FDI outcomes were fostered, and highlights the significance of family involvement, heartfelt disclosure and life reminiscence to local patients and families in palliative end-of-life care.
author2 Ho Hau Yan Andy
author_facet Ho Hau Yan Andy
Tan, Jun Hao
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Jun Hao
author_sort Tan, Jun Hao
title Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
title_short Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
title_full Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
title_fullStr Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
title_full_unstemmed Living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among Singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
title_sort living and dying with dignity : a qualitative study on the outcomes of family dignity intervention among singaporean palliative patients and caregivers
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77239
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