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Lifeworld phenomenology for caring and health care research

In Gill Thomson, Fiona Dykes & Soo Downe (eds.), Qualitative Research in Midwifery and Childbirth Phenomenological Approaches. Routledge (2011)

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  1. The intertwining of reconciliation and displacement : a lifeworld hermeneutic study of older adults’ perceptions of the finality of life.Lina Palmér, Maria Nyström, Gunilla Carlsson, Catharina Gillsjö, Irene Eriksson & Ann-Charlotte Dalheim-Englund - 2020 - International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-Being 15 (1).
    Purpose: This study aimed to explain and understand the existential meaning of the finality of life from the perspective of healthy older adults. Method: Participants were recruited from a major project on older adults’ life situations. They were interviewed about their thoughts on the end of life, and their responses were interpreted using a lifeworld hermeneutic approach. Results: The findings showed that thinking about the inevitable finality of life involves feelings of liberation, frightening thoughts, a comforting promise of something beyond (...)
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  • RETRACTED ARTICLE: The encounter with the vulnerable body: applying the lens of caring practice.Carlos Laranjeira - 2015 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 18 (3):435-435.
  • A lifeworld phenomenological study of the experience of living within ageing skin.Fiona Cowdell & Kathleen T. Galvin - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (4):e12251.
    Understanding people's experience of skin ageing as it is lived can enable sensitive approaches to promoting healthy skin and to care in general. By understanding the insider perspective, what it is like for individuals, a way to sensitise practice for more humanly sensitive care is offered. Through interviews with seventeen community‐dwelling older people, the essential meaning of living within ageing skin was illuminated as a state of managed inevitability. The skin is inevitably changing, and ageing skin is a marker of (...)
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