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Sudden illness and storytelling : identifying spiritual resilience in a liminal space : a phenomenological and narrative research project

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MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Donna Marie Field. Sudden Illness and Storytelling : Identifying Spiritual Resilience In a Liminal Space : a Phenomenological and Narrative Research Project. rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/d6e5e126-bcb1-4172-a896-546e797178ff.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

D. M. Field. Sudden illness and storytelling : identifying spiritual resilience in a liminal space : a phenomenological and narrative research project. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/d6e5e126-bcb1-4172-a896-546e797178ff

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Donna Marie Field. Sudden Illness and Storytelling : Identifying Spiritual Resilience In a Liminal Space : a Phenomenological and Narrative Research Project. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/d6e5e126-bcb1-4172-a896-546e797178ff.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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Abstract
  • More often than not, medicine has a dominant script of progressive treatment of a disease with the ultimate end goal being a cure, with full function. But this does not take into consideration that the patient’s perception of quality of life is at stake during the treatment journey. While healthcare providers will discover in their assessments the patients they treat have a form of faith, once the patient brings the words out into the open, some providers don’t know what to do. What does a provider do when the patient’s God language impinges upon the proposed treatment plan? Many providers recognize these words as those of hope, and no provider wants to trample on whatever hope the patient is expressing; that is considered cruel and not good medicine.
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Last modified
  • 02/17/2024

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