Receiving an organ is an event that marks a turning point in the patient’s life trajectory, not only because it marks the beginning of a new phase in the therapeutic process, but also because it opens up an unprecedented existential perspective in the recipient. This perspective is typically told through an autobiographical narrative marked by an implicitly religious or spiritual vocabulary centred on the feeling of rebirth and the sacredness of organ donation. Starting from the analysis of a corpus of qualitative interviews, the article aims to show the spirituality implicit in the autobiographical narratives of a group of members of the Associazione Nazionale Emo-Dializzati (ANED) of Turin (Italy). The data indicate that this implicit dimension is the product of a co-construction between patients and health workers in the context of the specific organizational culture of the hospital ward. This finding suggests possible directions for the implementation of spiritual care interventions in clinical practice.

The (Un)Expected gift. Implicated Religion in the Kidney Transplant Experience

Stefania Palmisano;Nicola Pannofino
2022-01-01

Abstract

Receiving an organ is an event that marks a turning point in the patient’s life trajectory, not only because it marks the beginning of a new phase in the therapeutic process, but also because it opens up an unprecedented existential perspective in the recipient. This perspective is typically told through an autobiographical narrative marked by an implicitly religious or spiritual vocabulary centred on the feeling of rebirth and the sacredness of organ donation. Starting from the analysis of a corpus of qualitative interviews, the article aims to show the spirituality implicit in the autobiographical narratives of a group of members of the Associazione Nazionale Emo-Dializzati (ANED) of Turin (Italy). The data indicate that this implicit dimension is the product of a co-construction between patients and health workers in the context of the specific organizational culture of the hospital ward. This finding suggests possible directions for the implementation of spiritual care interventions in clinical practice.
2022
Inglese
Esperti anonimi
25
1-2
175
191
17
https://journal.equinoxpub.com/IR/article/view/23883
Implicated Religion, Kidney Transplant Experience, Spirituality
no
   FROM CURE TO CARE - DIGITAL EDUCATION AND SPIRITUAL ASSISTANCE IN HOSPITAL HEALTHCARE
   FROM CURE TO CARE
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION BRUXELLES EACEA
   2020-1-IT02-KA226-HE-095300
2 – prodotto con deroga d’ufficio (SOLO se editore non consente/non ha risposto)
262
2
Stefania Palmisano; Nicola Pannofino
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
reserved
03-CONTRIBUTO IN RIVISTA::03A-Articolo su Rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1948453
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