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A Meaning of Death through Emotional Expression about Death after Nursing and Medical Students¡¯ End-of-Life Care Practice

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KMID : 0367020100220030329
Á¶°èÈ­ ( Jo Kae-Hwa ) - ´ë±¸°¡Å縯´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ °£È£Çаú

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to understand the meaning of death experienced by medical and nursing students through end-of-life care practice.

Methods: Data were collected by in-depth interviews with twelve (six nursing and six medical) students. Conventional qualitative content analysis was used to analyze the data. Results: This findings were analyzed in three areas: ¡¯feeling from the word of death¡¯, ¡¯color association of death¡¯, and ¡¯relation between life and death¡¯.

Results: were three major themes and sixteen categories from the analysis. Three major themes include ¡¯reality of uncertain death¡¯, ¡¯have to leave, and ¡¯new perception about death¡¯. Sixteen categories include ¡¯being well¡¯, ¡¯fear¡¯, ¡¯unknown¡¯, ¡¯boundless¡¯, ¡¯being with¡¯, ¡¯out of sight¡¯, ¡¯new start¡¯, ¡¯go back to¡¯, ¡¯place going by itself¡¯, ¡¯place to meet with¡¯, ¡¯being transformed¡¯, ¡¯a sense of futility¡¯, ¡¯the same point¡¯, ¡¯a different point¡¯, ¡¯continuous line¡¯, and ¡¯a crossroad¡¯.

Conclusion: The findings suggest a number of themes that nursing and medical students reported about the end of life experiences that could be explored as a way of improving end of life care.
KeyWords
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Death, Emotion, Expression
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ÇмúÁøÈïÀç´Ü(KCI) KoreaMed