Korean Journal of Hospice Care (호스피스학술지)
- Volume 5 Issue 2
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- Pages.75-85
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- 2005
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- 1598-3781(pISSN)
호스피스 케어가 말기암환자 가족들의 죽음에 대한 인식 변화에 미치는 영향
- Gye Gwang-Won ;
- Kim Jae-Song ;
- Won Ju-Hui ;
- Lee Seong-Ok ;
- Lee Chae-Yeong ;
- Jo Seong-Hun ;
- Park Yun-Mi ;
- Yun Yeong-Mi ;
- Lee Myeong-Suk ;
- Ju Seon-Mi
- 계광원 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 김재송 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 원주희 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 이성옥 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 이채영 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 조성훈 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 박윤미 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 윤영미 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 이명숙 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회) ;
- 주선미 (샘물호스피스 학술위원회)
- Published : 2005.10.01
Abstract
The objective of this research is to provide the basic material for effective hospice care by analyzing the recognition of families who have terminally ill patients over death. To do so, this research is designed to investigate the general tendency toward death and changes after hospice care. To analyse the initial status of the recognition about the death, questionnaires were provided to the families of the terminally ill patients who were taken hospice care from June 1st, 2005 to September 10th, 2005 at Saemmul Hospice. The same questionnaires were distributed to research some changes of the recognition of the death after 3 weeks. As the Data Analysis Methodology, SPSS v.10.0 statistics program were utilized. The summary of this research is as follows. First, by gender, it is analyzed that women have more fear than men in terms of incompetence sense after death. By religion, Christians have less fear than other religious people in terms of fear toward after death and general sense of death. Second, those who experienced deaths of close family members, relatives, friends for the past 3 years have more fear toward the moment of death than those who did not experience it. Third, statistically valid difference was found in terms of fear toward the moment of death, fear toward incompetence, fear toward after death, and fear toward death before and after the hospice care was taken. Based on the result of this research, terminally ill patients' families facing death have shown significant differences on fear and incompetence before and after hospice care was offered. It is necessary that the hospice care should be settled more professionally by expanding the opportunities of hospice care and institutionalizing the system. In addition, hospice activities which are focused on providing hope after death and facing death with dignity and peace should be expanded increasingly as the family members who experienced deaths showed higher degree of fear and powerlessness and Christians have less fear toward death with the help of biblical influence. It is also required that hospice care specialized in recognizing the importance of terminal cancer patients and their families at the same time.