Coming 'Home": Place Bonding for parents accessing or considering hospice based care

Date

2019-04-22

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Health and Place

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

Little literature examines the cognitive journey taken by parents considering/receiving hospice care for their child. A constructivist grounded theory study explored 38 parents’ views of considering/using a children’s hospice. Data analysed from focus groups and interviews identified three main concepts. The focus of this paper is identified as Coming ‘Home’. This concept depicts the desire and the sense of searching that parents experienced in trying to find a place, other than their actual home, where their child could access a caring environment and their parents received some respite from caregiving. Despite there being a paradox associated with hospice-based respite, once they had crossed the threshold the parents bonded with the place and experienced rootedness and familiarity. The hospice became a place of living and belonging; a place where they could ‘come home’.

Description

This study was part of a Phd studentship The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.

Keywords

Hospice, Children, Home, Respite, Place Bonding

Citation

Dunbar, H., Carter, B., Brown, J. (2019) Coming 'Home": Place Bonding for parents accessing or considering hospice based care. Health & Place, 57, pp. 101-106

Rights

Research Institute