Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Leaning In and Holding On: Team Support With Unexpected Death

MCN Am J Matern Child Nurs. 2014 Jan 17. [Epub ahead of print]

Leaning In and Holding On: Team Support With Unexpected Death.

Author information

  • Kathie Kobler is an APN, Pediatric Palliative Care, Advocte Children's Hospital, Park Ridge, IL. She can be reached via e-mail at kathie.kobler@advocatehealth.com.

Abstract

Integral to the care of medically fragile infants and children is the sobering reality that not all will survive. Supporting children and families through the dying process requires knowledge, skill, compassion, and a willingness to be present to the suffering of others. As healthcare professionals journey with a dying child, they experience an ongoing dual nature of their own grief, shifting between focusing on the loss at hand or avoiding the loss and refocusing their attention elsewhere.This internal conflict may be potentiated with the sudden, unexpected death of a patient, which affords little time for caregivers to process their own experience of the loss. When an unanticipated death occurs, a palpable grief ripples through the entire unit, impacting caregivers, the bereaved parents, and other patients and families. Such an event holds the potential for either team disorganization or growth. This article presents a case study of one unit's response to the unexpected death of a long-term patient, which caused caregivers to lean in to support each other. Using a case study approach, the author identifies strategies to best guide teams when death arrives without warning, and provides ideas for cocreating ritual to honor relationship in the midst of tragedy.

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