The effects of Expressing Writing on Palliative Care healthcare professionals: a qualitative study.


Journal

Acta bio-medica : Atenei Parmensis
ISSN: 2531-6745
Titre abrégé: Acta Biomed
Pays: Italy
ID NLM: 101295064

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
22 12 2021
Historique:
received: 06 12 2021
accepted: 09 12 2021
entrez: 17 1 2022
pubmed: 18 1 2022
medline: 27 1 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Expressive Writing (EW) is a useful tool for taking care of the person globally, and literature shows that self-care and self-awareness improve the coping skills of health professionals, positively increasing personal and professional satisfaction and reducing the negative aspects related to the profession, such as burnout. The objective of the research is to analyze the writings produced by healthcare professionals belonging to palliative care in a previous quantitative study to identify any changes between two sessions. It is a longitudinal qualitative research with an interpretative phenomenological methodology of analysis of documents written by professionals. The study included 50 expressive writings: 25 at Time 0 (T0) and 25 at Time 1 (T1). The analysis sample is composed of 25 professionals. All participants completed an Expressive Writing protocol homogeneous in procedure, mandate, and timing. The study revealed a variation in contents from T0 to T1 highlighting both professional and intimate growth of the professionals. The practitioner appears more aware of working together to achieve a goal. Writing evolve as more spontaneous. Attention is focused on the relationship with the patient as an engine of personal and professional growth. The satisfaction is linked to the management of a complex case in its entirety. The investigated instrument resulted in a beneficial change in the healthcare professionals involved. Writing helps to find strategies to take care of the other, improves communication, favors the sharing of experience with the other, increasing the awareness of limitations and strengths.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE WORK
Expressive Writing (EW) is a useful tool for taking care of the person globally, and literature shows that self-care and self-awareness improve the coping skills of health professionals, positively increasing personal and professional satisfaction and reducing the negative aspects related to the profession, such as burnout. The objective of the research is to analyze the writings produced by healthcare professionals belonging to palliative care in a previous quantitative study to identify any changes between two sessions.
METHODS
It is a longitudinal qualitative research with an interpretative phenomenological methodology of analysis of documents written by professionals. The study included 50 expressive writings: 25 at Time 0 (T0) and 25 at Time 1 (T1). The analysis sample is composed of 25 professionals. All participants completed an Expressive Writing protocol homogeneous in procedure, mandate, and timing.
RESULTS
The study revealed a variation in contents from T0 to T1 highlighting both professional and intimate growth of the professionals. The practitioner appears more aware of working together to achieve a goal. Writing evolve as more spontaneous. Attention is focused on the relationship with the patient as an engine of personal and professional growth. The satisfaction is linked to the management of a complex case in its entirety.
CONCLUSIONS
The investigated instrument resulted in a beneficial change in the healthcare professionals involved. Writing helps to find strategies to take care of the other, improves communication, favors the sharing of experience with the other, increasing the awareness of limitations and strengths.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35037634
doi: 10.23750/abm.v92iS2.12650
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

e2021335

Auteurs

Chiara Cosentino (C)

University of Parma. chiara.cosentino1@unipr.it.

Elena Baccarini (E)

. elenabaccarini1993@gmail.com.

Martina Melotto (M)

. mel8.martina@hotmail.it.

Riccardo Meglioraldi (R)

. rmeglioraldi@gmail.com.

Silvia D'Antimi (S)

. silvia.dantimi@gmail.com.

Valentina Semeraro (V)

. vale.semeraro@virgilio.it.

Victoria Cervantes Camacho (V)

. victoria.cervantescamacho@unipr.it.

Giovanna Artioli (G)

. giovanna.artioli@unipr.it.

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