Meaning in adjustment to cancer: a model of care
Objectives: In the clinical setting of cancer, meaning may well have a central role in the life changes the illness experience brings about. As health care professionals working with people with life-threatening illness, we are exposed to one of the major turning points in life and the ways people confront this transition. Meaning can assist coping by offering a framework, perspective, and counterbalance to the challenge of illness. However, the absence of meaning can be a precursor to profound despair.
Methods: This article brings together the clinical implications of two studies conducted by the authors that explored the role of meaning in adjustment to cancer, presenting a theoretical understanding of the experience of meaning in cancer and identifying some potential approaches to intervention.
Results: Our findings point to some specific goals of care as well as a number of therapeutic modalities aimed to meet these goals. We examine four goals of care--acknowledging suffering, encouraging a search for meaning, strengthening connection with others, and ensuring optimal physical care--as foundational in any clinical approach and then examine the key models of therapy that assist the clinician in pursuing these goals.
Significance of results: Our aim is to create an integrated approach to care provision that locates meaning centrally in any patient's adaptation.
History
Publication title
Palliative & Supportive CareVolume
6Pagination
61-70ISSN
1478-9515Department/School
School of Health SciencesPublisher
Cambridge University PressPlace of publication
United KingdomRights statement
© 2008 Cambridge University PressRepository Status
- Restricted