Ready to Go Home? Nurses' Perspectives of Prolonged Admission for Patients Undergoing Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery for Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer in Denmark

Malene Missel*, Pernille Orloff Donsel, René Horsleben Petersen, Malene Beck

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Enhanced recovery after surgery programs with median postoperative hospitalization of 2 days improve outcomes after lung cancer surgery. This article explores nursing care practices for patients with lung cancer who remain hospitalized despite having recovered somatically. Qualitative focus group interviews were conducted with 16 nurses. Ricoeur's phenomenological hermeneutics underpins the methodology applied in this study, and we relied on Benner and Wrubel's theory. The nurses emphasized that the thoughts of patients with a recent lung cancer diagnosis revolve around more than the surgery. Nursing comprises not only practicalities but also attending to patients' stress and their coping with being struck with lung cancer and having undergone surgery. A counterculture emerged to counteract the logic of productivity, indicating that caring as a worthy end in itself may be underestimated in protocol-driven care. Prolonging hospitalization largely depends on clinical judgment. The nurses' aim is not to keep patients in the hospital but to avoid any needless suffering, allowing them to reclaim the primacy of caring.

Original languageEnglish
JournalQualitative Health Research
VolumeOnline first
ISSN1049-7323
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ERAS
  • Ricoeur
  • focus group interviews
  • lung cancer
  • nursing
  • nursing theory
  • phenomenology
  • qualitative study
  • surgery

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