• Title/Summary/Keyword: 호스피스 환자

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Music Therapy in Hospice Care (호스피스에서의 음악치료)

  • Moon, Ji-Young
    • Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.67-73
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    • 2007
  • To make ones life meaningful is one of human's most valuable goal. Nevertheless, for cancer patients who are in the last phase of their lives obtaining this goal may be threatened by physical, psychological, and social difficulties. Music therapy ran be utilized to effectively fill in these physical, psychological, and social needs. In the form of a creative art, music therapy can be effective in easing the pain and tension as well as assisting the patient to discover meanings of life through psychological comfort. Further, music is itself a verbal/non-verbal communication tool and thus connects the patients with their families with understanding and sympathy. This study aims to examine the need and role of music therapy in hospice.

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Nurse's Experience of Changing Role in the Hospice Unit of Medical Ward (호스피스병동 간호사의 역할 변화 경험)

  • Kim, Hyun-Joo;Ku, Jeong-Il;Byun, Jun-Hye;Kim, Su-Mi;Choe, Wha-Sook
    • Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.30-41
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    • 2008
  • Purpose: This study was designed to investigate various role changes of nurses who have cared both medical cases and hospice patients and what they experienced. Methods: Focus group interviews were done 3 times and participants were 12 nurses who have worked in the hospice unit of medical ward. Results: Role changes in 4 areas such as holistic care, end-of-life care, care fur rare givers, and coordination of hospice team were reported by the participants. What they felt were as follows : fear, confusion, maturation, increasingly labor, regret, accomplishment, sympathy and depression. Conclusion: Although hospice care in general medical ward added extra tasks, it helped clinical nurses recover professional identity and led to growth of nursing by acquiring new knowledge and skill in hospice care.

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Needs of Hospice Care and Quality of Life for Cancer Patients (암환자의 호스피스 간호 요구와 삶의 질)

  • Seo, In-Sun;Shin, Mi-Hwa;Hong, Se-Hwa
    • Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.89-97
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    • 2010
  • Purpose: This study investigated the relationship between the needs for hospice care and quality of life in cancer patients. Methods: Data were collected from 127 cancer patients hospitalized at a university hospital in Chonbuk between October, 2006 to March, 2007. Two instruments were used: cancer patients' need for hospice care, developed by Kang and Kim and quality of life developed by Tae et al. Results: The mean scores were 3.11 out of 4 for hospice care needs, and 5.25 out of 10 for quality of life. The correlation between needs for hospice care and quality of life was moderate and negative (r=-0.395, P<0.01). Among the four groups of needs, physical need was the most strongly correlated with quality of lifer (r=-0.388, P<0.01). The need for hospice care was significantly different according to participants' religion (t=6.02, P<0.05), and duration of disease (F=3.45, P< 0.05). Quality of life was significantly different according to participants' monthly income (F=3.38, P<0.05). cancer stage (F=8.10, P<0.01) and chemotherapy (t=6.09, P=0.015). Conclusion: The results suggested that the cancer patients' hospice care needs should be answered in order to improve their quality of life. While doing so, participants' characteristic need should also be considered.