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A Study of the Lived Experiences of Clients Receiving Long-Term Hemodialysis

Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 1997³â 27±Ç 2È£ p.444 ~ 453
KMID : 0806119970270020444
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to construct a grounded theory as the basis for nursing intervention by describing and analysing the holistic lived experiences of clients receiving long-term hemodialysis. The subjects of this study were fifteen persons receiving regular hemodialysis regimen at artificial kindey treatment centers in two different university hospitals, and who were able to participate in conversation and were available for long and dup interviews. Eight of the subjects were male and seven were female and their ages ranged from 30s to 60s. The length of the hemodialysis experience ranged from two months to six years. The collection and analysis of data were done in accordance with the grounded theory methodology of Strauss & Corbin. The method to collect the data mainly depended. on long and deep interviews, participant observation and focused group interviews and the equipment used to collect data were a portable tape recorder and field notes. The study is summarized as follows : 1. The meaning of holistic lived experiences of clients receiving long -term hemodialysis was found to be uncertainty. which was identified as the core category. 2. The main categories following the core category were found to be shock, ambiguity, social support and quality of life. 3. Through the main category the type of behavior newly formed by clients receiving long-term hemodialysis was found to be as follows. That is to say, in the circumstances of shock caused by the identified fact and the ambiguity of hemodilysis they formed a quality of life based on social support, which was found to be a kind of chaotic phenomenon. 4. The lived experiences of clients receiving long-tern hemodialysis was found to include nine categories : emotional shock, feelings of isolation, burden, unclearness, dependency, help from others, coping strategies, maintenance of self-esteem and transitional life. 5. The intervening factors influencing each category are as follows : 1) The factors influencing emetional shock were found to be set age, the level of knowledge received in advance, locus of control, the period of struggle against the disease before hemodialysis and whether any serious illness existed. 2) The factors influencing feelings of isolation were found to be religion and the length of the hemodialysis experience. 3) The factors influencing burden were found to be sex, economic situation, employment status and the length of the hemodialysis experience. 4) The factors influencing unclearness were found to be sex, age, religion. economic situation, the length of the hemodiaysis experience, whether they had had a transfusion and whether there were any complications. 5) The factors influencing help from others were found to be religion. economic situation, past experiences and whether family members lived together. 6) The factors influencing coping strategies were foung to be age, level of education, experiences of illness and locus of control. 7) The factors influeruing maintenance of self-esteem were found to be the length of the hemodialysis experience and self-actualization. 8) The factors influencing transitional life were found to be age, religion, economic situation, employment status. locus of control. past experiences and whether there was a plan for a kidney transplant.
KeyWords
Ç÷¾×Åõ¼®, »ýÈ°°æÇè, Hemodialysis, Lived Experiences
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