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CANCER NARRATIVES WITHIN A CANCER TRAJECTORY

2nd Global Congress on Hospice & Palliative Care

Gerard A Tobin

MCPHS University, USA

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Palliat Care Med

DOI: 10.4172/2165-7386.C1.006

Abstract
The aim of this paper is to offer the meanings and experience of a group of people who were given a cancer diagnosis. The power of their stories and the insightfulness of their narrative provided a rich tapestry from which healthcare professionals can gain insight. The discussion will focus on the meanings attributed to their experience of what will be refereed to as the diagnosis trajectory. Recipients (people who received a cancer diagnosis) and significant others (identified by recipient) were invited to participate. For the purpose of this presentation, the focus will be on the narrative of the recipient and the meanings which they attributed to their story. Interviews were coded using a phenomenological descriptive approach. A number of core themes which emerged were: the waiting game; being seen; pretty is important; dismissive mantra; living the diagnosis. Truth and openness were seen as critical to enabling the person to cope. The need to have ones suspicions acknowledged and not dismissed and the overwhelming cry for recognition as a person, a mother, a lover and not just a lump or blockage was a heart cry of many as they shared from the depth of their experience and the reality of the everyday celebration of surviving. The study highlights the use of narrative to inform and challenge practice as a powerful tool and recognises the strength of voice and clarity of experience as offering methodological and ethical challenges for the nurse and the researcher.
Biography

Email: gerard.tobin@mcphs.edu

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