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Accompaniment and Bearing Witness: The Path Through Liminal Spaces in Healthcare.

Dawn Hood-PattersonBrian S Carter
Published in: The American journal of hospice & palliative care (2023)
Clinician-healers bear witness to suffering and accompany patients and families through the liminal spaces of an illness experience. Bearing witness to a patient's suffering is a form of attunement toward the ill or hospitalized person. Non-action, or wu wei , becomes illustrative of the empathy that develops as clinicians bear witness to the suffering of patients and families. This empathic response highlights the clinician's moral obligation to accompany their patients. Accompaniment is a form of "co-action" which orients the clinician to a mutual relationship with patients and families. Co-action incites new meaning-making within the liminal spaces and holds the potential to change the clinician's identity as practitioner and healer.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • healthcare
  • chronic kidney disease
  • newly diagnosed
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • palliative care
  • patient reported outcomes
  • risk assessment
  • health insurance
  • health information