‘The beauty and the less beautiful’: exploring the meanings of dying at ‘home’ among community and practitioner representatives and advocates across Canada

Funk, L., Krawczyk, M. , Cherba, M., Cohen, S. R., Dujela, C., Nichols, C. and Stajduhar, K. (2023) ‘The beauty and the less beautiful’: exploring the meanings of dying at ‘home’ among community and practitioner representatives and advocates across Canada. Palliative Care and Social Practice, 17, p. 26323524231156944. (doi: 10.1177/26323524231156944)

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Abstract

Background: Significant structural and normative pressures privilege the ideal of dying at home in Canada. At the same time, the social complexities and meanings associated with dying in particular locations remain critically unexamined. Objective: The aim of this study is to explore how diverse community members, including health and social care stakeholders, talk about preferences for locations of dying, with a particular focus on meanings of dying at home. Design: Semi-structured virtual interviews were conducted with 24 community and practitioner representatives and advocates across Canada during the Covid-19 pandemic. This included compassionate community advocates, palliative care professionals and volunteers, bereaved carers, and members of queer, rural, and immigrant communities. Participants were asked about their own preferences for location of dying and elaborated on these aspects with regard to their client population or community group. Results: Our analysis illuminates how meanings of dying at home are connected to previous experiences and perceptions of institutional care. As such, participants’ perspectives are often framed as a rejection of institutional care. Dying at home also often signals potential for preserving ontological security and relational connection in the face of life-threatening illness. However, participants’ expertise simultaneously informs a sense that dying at home is often unattainable. At times, this awareness underpins interpretations of both preferences and choices as contingent on considerations of the nature and type of illness, concerns about impacts on families, and available resources. Conclusion: The ideal of dying at home is nuanced by identity, relational, and structural contexts. Knowledge from this study can inform realistic and practical person-centered planning across care settings. It can also help create more representative public policy and health system quality indicators regarding a ‘good death’ that do not rely on or perpetuate undeveloped and unrealistic assumptions about dying, home, and family care.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:This research was funded by an Insight Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (435-2018-0257).
Keywords:Dying at home, hospice care, interpretive research, palliative care, place of death, public preferences.
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Krawczyk, Dr Marian
Authors: Funk, L., Krawczyk, M., Cherba, M., Cohen, S. R., Dujela, C., Nichols, C., and Stajduhar, K.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > School of Social & Environmental Sustainability
Journal Name:Palliative Care and Social Practice
Publisher:SAGE Publications
ISSN:2632-3524
ISSN (Online):2632-3524
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2023 The Authors
First Published:First published in Palliative Care and Social Practice 17: 26323524231156944
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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