Conceptualising personhood in nursing care for people with altered consciousness, cognition and behaviours: A discussion paper

Author:

Kivunja Stephen12ORCID,Pryor Julie13ORCID,River Jo45ORCID,Gullick Janice1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery (Sydney Nursing School), Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Department of Neurosurgery Western Sydney Local Health District, Westmead Hospital Westmead New South Wales Australia

3. Research Office Royal Rehab Group Milsons Point New South Wales Australia

4. Faculty of Health University of Technology Sydney, Broadway Ultimo New South Wales Australia

5. Mental Health Drug and Alcohol Services Northern Sydney Local Health District Ryde New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe aim of this discussion paper is to explore factors and contexts that influence how nurses might conceptualise and assign personhood for people with altered consciousness, cognition and behaviours. While a biomedical framing is founded upon a dichotomy between the body and self, such that the body can be subjected to a medical and objectifying gaze, relational theories of self, multiculturalism and technological advances for life‐sustaining interventions present new dilemmas which necessitate discussion about what constitutes personhood. The concept of personhood is dynamic and evolving: where historical constructs of rationality, agency, autonomy and a conscious mind once formed the basis for personhood, these ideas have been challenged to encompass embodied, relational, social and cultural paradigms of selfhood. Themes in this discussion include: the right to personhood, mind–body dualism versus the embodied self; personhood as consciousness, rationality and narratives of self; social relational contexts of personhood and cultural contexts of personhood. Patricia Benner's and Christine Tanner's clinical judgement model is then applied to consider the implications for nursing care that seeks to reflexively incorporate personhood. Nurse clinicians are able to move between conceptions of personhood and act to support the body, as well as presumed autonomy and relational, social and cultural personhood. In doing so, they use analytical, intuitive and narrative reasoning which prioritises autonomous constructions of self. They also incorporate relational and social contexts of the person receiving care within the possibilities of technological advances and constraints of contextual resources.

Publisher

Wiley

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