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  4. Protecting Personhood: A Classic Grounded Theory
 

Protecting Personhood: A Classic Grounded Theory

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/45532
Version
Published
Date Issued
2023-09-23
Author(s)
Didier, Amélia
Nathaniel, Alvita
Scott, Helen
Look, Susanne
Benaroyo, Lazare
Zumstein-Shaha, Maya  
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
The importance of perceiving and considering patients as healthcare partners has been increasingly promoted. Healthcare systems around the world are now highly interested in patient engagement, participation, collaboration, and partnership. Healthcare professionals are advised that patients, as autonomous beings, should be active in and responsible for a portion of their own care. The study presented here focused on patients’ perceptions of interprofessional collaboration. It was conducted using the classic grounded theory methodology. The theory of protecting personhood emerged as the core concept of hospitalized patients, cared for by interprofessional healthcare teams. This theory encapsulates the process hospitalized patients go through to find balance in their sense of self, oscillating between personhood and patienthood in the unfamiliar hospital environment. The process consists of four stages: the stage of introspection, during which hospitalized patients become aware of their self as a person and as a patient; the stage of preservation, when patients find a balance between the sense of personhood and patienthood; the stage of rupture, wherein patients experience an imbalance between their sense of personhood and patienthood; and the stage of reconciliation, in which personhood is restored. The theory of protecting personhood offers insights into a better understanding of hospitalized patients’ experiences and strategies, revealing the importance of relationships, and the driving force of empowerment. This study is about patients’ perspectives of interprofessional healthcare teams. A grounded theory process allowed the emergence of patients’ concerns and expectations, leading to a substantive theory grounded in the patients’ data.
Subjects
RT Nursing
DOI
https://doi.org/10.24451/dspace/12090
Publisher DOI
10.1177/10497323231190329
Journal or Serie
Qualitative Health Research
ISSN
1049-7323
Publisher URL
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/10497323231190329
Organization
Gesundheit  
Pflege  
Volume
33
Issue
13
Publisher
Sage
Submitter
Zumstein-Shaha, Maya
Citation apa
Didier, A., Nathaniel, A., Scott, H., Look, S., Benaroyo, L., & Zumstein-Shaha, M. (2023). Protecting Personhood: A Classic Grounded Theory (Vol. 33, Issue 13). Sage. https://doi.org/10.24451/dspace/12090
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