Dignity In Nursing

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Brown et al (2017) document dignity was commonly understood as independence, privacy, comfort and care, individuality, respect, communication, physical appearance and being seen as human. To successfully deliver the dignity care to end of life patient, it requires that nurses need to obey the 6Cs of nursing (care, compassion, competence, communicate, courage and commitment) in order to the standard care not fall behind (DH, 2012). By following NMC code (2015) we are now taking forward this work in dignity to explore how to promote dignity in routine care. Then the further researcher should explore whether Dignity Therapy can be routine intervention and integrated into day to day practice of palliative care team or end of life care team. NICE …show more content…

Boland et al (2014) pointed out that the systematic reviews are considered as the best way to synthesize the finding of several studies investigating the same questions. The authors further confirmed that the Dignity Therapy (DT) is an effective and beneficial psychotherapy to relieve psychological and existential distress in patients with advanced life-threatening diseases. Also, the area of research is from different countries including UK, USA, Canada, Portugal, Australia, Denmark, Spain, Sweden, and Japan, published in English. It makes the result can easily transferable and generalizes to the UK, even expanding to the Europe and Asia …show more content…

And authors mentioned the adaptability of therapy to different population and cultures, although the therapy may need to make some adjustment in its application. All the articles critical appraised by using CASP and methodological shortcoming identified and reported. It makes the evidence more reliable. Also widely audit standard tools were used for assessing the patients; it shows the result more truly. In addition, Martinez et al (2016) considered family members and professionals’ satisfaction regarding Dignity Therapy, they think Dignity Therapy has a positive effect on the patients’ family and helped health professionals to better understand the

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