Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Lynn Bassett"'
Autor:
John Downey, Mauro Fornasiero, Susan Cooper, Lynn Bassett, Margaret Doherty, Alejandra Dubeibe Fong, Natasha Bradley, Jon Cornwall
Publikováno v:
Palliative Medicine. 37:413-420
Background: Palliative care requires innovative methods to understand what works, for whom, in what circumstances and why. Realist evaluation has become one prominent approach due to its preoccupation with building, and testing, causal theories to ex
Publikováno v:
Poster Presentations.
Autor:
Karen Sanders, Joanne Elverson, Margaret Doherty, Lynn Bassett, Amy Gadoud, Amarachukwu Nwosu
Publikováno v:
Oral presentations.
Background People in the UK are often uncomfortable with supporting the dying. As the population ages we are less likely to have supported a loved one who has died. Methods The Centre for the Art of Dying Well, with palliative care experts and expert
Autor:
Lynn Bassett
Publikováno v:
Journal for the Study of Spirituality. 9:75-78
Autor:
Lynn Bassett
Publikováno v:
Health and Social Care Chaplaincy. 5:194-208
Care is often perceived as “doing something”; spiritual care also involves “being with” another person. This case, set in a hospice inpatient unit, highlights a relationship between being and doing, and the role of chaplains within multi-disc
Publikováno v:
Palliative Medicine. 32:185-194
Background: In interactions between professional caregivers, patients and family members at the end of life, silence often becomes more prevalent. Silence is acknowledged as integral to interpersonal communication and compassionate care but is also n
Autor:
Lynn Bassett
Publikováno v:
Health and Social Care Chaplaincy. 6:124-126
Revd Professor Peter Madsen Gubi, What Counsellors and Spiritual Directors Can Learn from Each Other: Ethical Practice, Training and Supervision. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2017, 169 pp. (Pbk). ISBN: 978-1-785920-250-7, £18.99.
Publikováno v:
Patient care.
Background At the end of life silence seems to take increasing prominence in encounters between professional caregivers, patients and their family members but its value as an element of spiritual care has been little explored. Whilst silence lends it