Multicultural family members’ experiences with nurses and the intensive care context: A hermeneutic study
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/134180Utgivelsesdato
2010Metadata
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Originalversjon
Intensive & Critical Care Nursing (2010) 26(1) s.24-32Sammendrag
Background: The aim of this study was to illuminate the experiences of multicultural family
members in intensive care units in hospitals, when a loved one was critically ill. An increasing
migration from non-Western countries to Norway and potential double-stress for multicultural
families experiencing critical illness are pre-understandings.
Methods: The study utilised a Gadamerian hermeneutic design. Data were collected through indepth-
interviews (n = 5) and interpreted, inspired by Lindseth and Norberg’s phenomenological
hermeneutical method.
Findings: Multicultural family members’ experiences of their encounters with nurses were
understood as: ‘Struggling to preserve the families’ cultural belonging within the health care
system’, based on four themes: (a) filtering information to reduce concern; (b) understanding
and being understood; (c) protecting cultural traditions and (d) interaction between roles, rules
and expectations.
Conclusion: Family members with a non-Western ethnic background experienced several
challenges within the complex ICU environment. Multicultural family members had distinct
strategies to deal with the hospitalisation of a critically ill loved one. Interaction difficulties
and cultural traditions were not influenced by the environment alone, however the challenges
seemed to deal with universal human interaction independent of the context. Nurses need to
be sensitive to the families’ cultural customs in order to meet their expectations in a respectful
way.
Beskrivelse
The original publication is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.iccn.2009.10.003