Phenomenology & Practice (Mar 2018)

Acting Slow in a Fast World: A Phenomenological Study of Caring in the Recovery Room

  • Pia Dreyer,
  • Bente Martinsen,
  • Annelise Norlyk,
  • Anita Haahr

DOI
https://doi.org/10.29173/pandpr29356
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 31 – 39

Abstract

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In this paper, we discuss “the slow in the fast” related to care situations in a “fast-track” hospital setting were the length of patients’ stay has been reduced significantly. The discussion is based on a narrative created from observations made in a postoperative care unit where patients are intensively observed and cared for during a very short time span. We found that within the phenomenological notions of lived time, lived space and lived illness, it is possible to create an imaginative space in time – to make a time warp. Despite being in a setting where the objective time measure dominates, the nurse can create a rhythm of her own in the room. Thus, acting slow in the quick meeting means that nurse-patient relationship is characterized by calmness and quietness, the nurse’s engagement in the patient’s suffering and her help to the patient to endure the present and hold the now.