Blar i VID:Open på emneord "care"
Viser treff 1-6 av 6
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Caring for–caring about: Negotiations of values in pastoral care
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2024)The term “care” in pastoral care means caring for others. Yet those who care for others in pastoral conversations can also be defined existentially as people who care about the world, that is, people who hold values. This ... -
Configurations of care work: Fragile partnerships in the co-production of long-term care services.
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)Over the last decade, authorities in several Western countries have stated their ambitions to increase the share of volunteers contributing alongside professionals in the future long-term care (LTC) sector, but the ... -
Critical perspectives on person, care and aging: Unmasking their interconnections
(Journal article, 2020)The need for theoretical and empirical investigation of perspectives on the concept of person in relation to care and ageing is highly relevant due to care policy approaches guided by ideas and priorities in relation to ... -
Doing pastoral care among young adults and the youth a diaconal concern
(Master thesis, 2016)This research is about pastoral care among the youth and young adults. It is the study of how best the youth and young adult in our society can find and get the help that the society can offer to them. The study is not ... -
The relationship as possibility and future gift in mental health encounters
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)This article highlights the lived experience of the relationship between the mental health nurse and the patient in institutional treatment. The premise for a relationship between persons in professional settings is the ... -
“Struck down by cancer with no old life to fall back on” a clinical study of illness experiences among Norwegian adolescent and young adult cancer survivors investigating the ethical implications of their illness narratives
(Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)Background: Cancer is a leading cause of death among people 15–24 years of age. Increasing numbers of cancer patients survive. Extensive cancer therapy may cause wide-ranging somatic and psychosocial challenges in the lives ...