Acupuncture in hospice settings: A qualitative exploration of patients’ experiences

Whilst acupuncture has the potential to impact on many aspects of health and well‐being, including end‐of‐life care, there is little research regarding patients’ experiences of its effects within the context of palliative care in hospice settings. The aim of this study was to address this gap, by ex...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEuropean journal of cancer care Vol. 27; no. 2; pp. e12802 - n/a
Main Authors McPhail, P., Sandhu, H., Dale, J., Stewart‐Brown, S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Hindawi Limited 01.03.2018
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Summary:Whilst acupuncture has the potential to impact on many aspects of health and well‐being, including end‐of‐life care, there is little research regarding patients’ experiences of its effects within the context of palliative care in hospice settings. The aim of this study was to address this gap, by exploring patients’ experiences of acupuncture within this setting. In‐depth, semi‐structured interviews were conducted with a sample of eighteen patients who had received acupuncture as part of hospice care. Transcription of data, with thematic analysis, identified two overarching themes: (1) participant perceptions of the effects of acupuncture including pain control, improved physical and emotional health, spiritual well‐being and awareness of health as a holistic phenomenon; and (2) factors which participants believed enabled acupuncture to have these effects including the quality of the practitioner relationship, engagement of participants in the process of their treatment and prior expectations that acupuncture could work. Acupuncture was found to be a highly acceptable, accessible and popular treatment with positive holistic effects reported across the domains of physical, mental and spiritual health and no serious adverse effects. By enabling awareness of the holistic nature of health and well‐being, acupuncture was experienced as having the potential to contribute to a better death, an emergent theory that needs testing in further studies. In the meanwhile, the results of this study offer encouragement to hospices currently providing or considering investing in acupuncture provision.
Bibliography:Funding information
The study was self‐funded.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0961-5423
1365-2354
DOI:10.1111/ecc.12802