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1.
Rev Med Suisse ; 18(774): 555-557, 2022 Mar 23.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35343130

ABSTRACT

Est-il paradoxal de parler de violence à l'hôpital, institution qui se présente aujourd'hui comme un espace bienveillant de soins et de sécurité ? Or, derrière de rares cas d'agressivité physique et verbale, manifestes, se cachent d'autres formes de violence plus silencieuses, qui abîment les relations soignant-soigné, la sécurité et la confiance. Les identifier est le seul moyen d'y faire face.


Subject(s)
Hospitals , Violence , Humans
2.
Death Stud ; 39(8): 473-82, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26107119

ABSTRACT

In Switzerland, where assisted suicide but not euthanasia is permitted, the authors sought to understand how physicians integrate palliative sedation in their practice and how they reflect on existential suffering and death hastening. They interviewed 31 physicians from different care settings. Five major attitudes emerged. Among specialized palliative care physicians, convinced, cautious and doubtful attitudes were evident. Within unspecialized settings, palliative sedation was more likely to be considered as death hastening: clinicians either avoid it with an inexperienced attitude or practice it with an ambiguous attitude, raising the issue of unskilled and abusive uses of sedatives at the end of life.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Euthanasia/psychology , Palliative Care/psychology , Physicians/psychology , Adult , Conscious Sedation/methods , Conscious Sedation/psychology , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Switzerland
3.
Patient Educ Couns ; 98(6): 771-6, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25800651

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to analyze complaints of patients, their relatives, and friends who consulted a complaints center based (Espace Patients & Proches (EPP)) in a hospital so as to better understand the reasons that motivated them and their underlying expectations. METHODS: This study was based on the analysis of written accounts of the 253 situations that occurred during the first year of operation of the EPP. The accounts were analyzed qualitatively using an inductive, thematic analytic approach. RESULTS: We identified 372 different types of complaints and 28 main analytic themes. Five clustered themes emerged from the analysis of the interconnections among the core themes: (1) interpersonal relationship (N=160-the number of accounts including a complaint related to this general theme); (2) technical aspects of care (N=106); (3) health-care institution (N=69); (4) billing and insurance; (5) access to information (N=13). CONCLUSION: The main reason for patients, their relatives, and friends going to EPP was related to the quality of the interpersonal relationship with health-care professionals. Such complaints were markedly more frequent than those concerning technical aspects of care. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: These results raise important questions concerning changing patient expectations as well as how hospitals integrate complaints into the process of quality health care.


Subject(s)
Communication , Family/psychology , Friends/psychology , Hospital-Patient Relations , Inpatients/psychology , Patient Satisfaction/statistics & numerical data , Quality of Health Care , Aged , Female , Hospital Administration , Hospitals , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Middle Aged , Physician-Patient Relations , Process Assessment, Health Care , Professional-Family Relations
4.
Palliat Support Care ; 13(4): 839-47, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24825473

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Previous literature has suggested that laws and regulations may impact the use of palliative sedation. Our present study compares the attitudes of French-speaking physicians practicing in the Quebec and Swiss environments, where different laws are in place regarding physician-assisted suicide. METHOD: Data were drawn from two prior studies, one by Blondeau and colleagues and another by Beauverd and coworkers, employing the same two-by-two experimental design with length of prognosis and type of suffering as independent variables. Both the effect of these variables and the effect of their interaction on Swiss and Quebec physicians' attitudes toward sedation were compared. The written comments of respondents were submitted to a qualitative content analysis and summarized in a comparative perspective. RESULTS: The analysis of variance showed that only the type of suffering had an effect on physicians' attitudes toward sedation. The results of the Wilcoxon test indicated that the attitudes of physicians from Quebec and Switzerland tended to be different for two vignettes: long-term prognosis with existential suffering (p = 0.0577) and short-term prognosis with physical suffering (p = 0.0914). In both cases, the Swiss physicians were less prone to palliative sedation. SIGNIFICANCE OF RESULTS: The attitudes of physicians from Quebec and Switzerland toward palliative sedation, particularly regarding prognosis and type of suffering, seem similar. However, the results suggest that physicians from Quebec could be slightly more open to palliative sedation, even though most were not in favor of this practice as an answer to end-of-life existential suffering.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Deep Sedation/statistics & numerical data , Euthanasia/psychology , Palliative Care/methods , Physicians/psychology , Humans , Prognosis , Qualitative Research , Quebec , Surveys and Questionnaires , Switzerland
5.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (110): 78-89, 2012 Sep.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23091919

ABSTRACT

Hypnosis is recognised in medicine as an effective complementary therapy. However, few qualitative data are available concerning the benefits it may bring. This qualitative exploratory study aimed to examine the contribution of hypnosis to the care of advanced cancer patients. Results demonstrate that hypnosis is an effective and efficient means of developing the resources of people suffering from serious illness. After an average of four hypnotherapy sessions, patients said they were able to locate previously unexploited resources within themselves and were able to become autonomous in the use of self-hypnosis. The major benefit reported concerned a reduction in anxiety. For patients experiencing anxiety about death, hypnosis allowed them, within a therapeutic environment perceived as safe, to explore different facets of their fears and to develop adaptive strategies. Aside from slight fatigue experienced during the sessions, no adverse side-effects were reported. In conclusion, this study exploring the effects of hypnosis allowed us to identify important benefits for patients suffering from advanced cancer. Consequently, replication on a larger scale is recommended in order to ascertain the extent to which it is possible to generalise from these results and in order better to define the characteristics of patients most likely to benefit from this therapy.


Subject(s)
Hypnosis , Neoplasms/psychology , Neoplasms/therapy , Adult , Aged , Anxiety/therapy , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Palliative Care
6.
J Nerv Ment Dis ; 197(5): 362-7, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19440110

ABSTRACT

Therapist competence is a key variable for psychotherapy research. Empirically, the relationship between competence and therapeutic outcome has shown contradictory results and needs to be clarified, especially with regard to possible variables influencing this relationship. A total of 78 outpatients were treated by 15 therapists in a very brief 4-session format, based on psychoanalytic theory. Data were analyzed by means of a nested design using hierarchical linear modeling. No direct link between therapist competence and outcome has been found, however, results corroborated the importance of alliance patterns as moderator in the relationship between therapist competence and outcome. Only in dyads with alliance change over the course of treatment was it clear that competence is positively related to outcome. These findings are discussed with regard to the importance for outcome of therapist competence and alliance construction processes.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/therapy , Professional Competence , Psychotherapy, Brief , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Outcome , Young Adult
8.
Sante Ment Que ; 29(1): 81-92, 2004.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15470564

ABSTRACT

Psychoanalytic treatments have been relegated to a secondary status in the current recommendations concerning the treatment of anxiety disorders. This is due to the lack of controlled studies pertaining to these psychotherapies, as well as to the late adaptation of psychoanalysis to the contemporary trends of psychopathology and psychotherapy focusing on symptoms. The recent development of a manualized psychotherapy for the treatment of panic disorder, the Panic-Focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (PFPP), is a good example of such an adaptation (Milrod et al., 1997). PFPP appears to be effective (Milrod, 2001). This type of psychotherapy is probably neither more nor less effective than other forms of psychotherapy if one considers the results of empirical research on the comparative effectiveness of psychotherapies. The question formulated by the title of this paper is perhaps less central as is that of the nature of the active factors of the psychotherapeutic process.


Subject(s)
Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Psychoanalytic Therapy , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Humans , Manuals as Topic , Panic Disorder/diagnosis , Panic Disorder/psychology , Panic Disorder/therapy , Psychoanalytic Theory , Treatment Outcome
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