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Wiley InterScience

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NURSES' EXPERIENCES
From critical care to comfort care: the sustaining value of humour
Ruth Anne Kinsman Dean PhD, RN and Joanne E Major MN, RN
Senior Instructor, Faculty of Nursing, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, CanadaClinical Nurse Specialist, Respiratory Medicine, Health Sciences Centre, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Correspondence to Ruth Anne Kinsman Dean
Faculty of Nursing
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg
MB
Canada R3T 2N2
Telephone: 204 474 6816
E-mail: ruth_dean@umanitoba.ca
Copyright Journal compilation © 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
KEYWORDS
critical care • ethnography • humour • nursing • palliative care • team work
dean rak & major je (2008)  Journal of Clinical Nursing17, 1088–1095
From critical care to comfort care: the sustaining value of humour

ABSTRACT

Aims and objectives. To identify commonalities in the findings of two research studies on humour in diverse settings to illustrate the value of humour in team work and patient care, despite differing contexts.

Background. Humour research in health care commonly identifies the value of humour for enabling communication, fostering relationships, easing tension and managing emotions. Other studies identify situations involving serious discussion, life-threatening circumstances and high anxiety as places where humour may not be appropriate. Our research demonstrates that humour is significant even where such circumstances are common place.

Method. Clinical ethnography was the method for both studies. Each researcher conducted observational fieldwork in the cultural context of a healthcare setting, writing extensive fieldnotes after each period of observation. Additional data sources were informal conversations with patients and families and semi-structured interviews with members of the healthcare team. Data analysis involved line-by-line analysis of transcripts and fieldnotes with identification of codes and eventual collapse into categories and overarching themes.

Results. Common themes from both studies included the value of humour for team work, emotion management and maintaining human connections. Humour served to enable co-operation, relieve tensions, develop emotional flexibility and to 'humanise' the healthcare experience for both caregivers and recipients of care.

Conclusions. Humour is often considered trivial or unprofessional; this research verifies that it is neither. The value of humour resides, not in its capacity to alter physical reality, but in its capacity for affective or psychological change which enhances the humanity of an experience, for both care providers and recipients of care.

Relevance to clinical practice. In the present era which emphasises technology, efficiency and outcomes, humour is crucial for promoting team relationships and for maintaining the human dimension of health care. Nurses should not be reluctant to use humour as a part of compassionate and personalised care, even in critical situations.


Submitted for publication: 23 August 2006 Accepted for publication: 26 April 2007

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1365-2702.2007.02090.x About DOI

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