The development should, instead, be seen as an attempt to integrate and expand the perspective on the patients’ situation. The human is both biology and existence interwoven into a complex whole, and it is this whole that needs
space in situations where humans are at their most vulnerable. In conclusion, the present study supports and develops previous research focusing on the importance of relational aspects of caring. The lifeworld perspective, which has a common root for both caring science and a Navitoclax research approach, clarifies the need for a reflected patient perspective in caring encounters. Considering the situation in which the team meeting occurs as an occasion for care creates possibilities for seeing the patient’s lifeworld, and hopefully, professionals working in a clinical context can take advantage from the
result in various ways. For example, professionals need to be aware of the moods they bring in to the situation; they also need readiness to acknowledge moods expressed by the patient as well as readiness to touch existential issues. How the encounter is understood and interpreted will remain in the memory of the MEK inhibitor patient; for the professionals this involves a great responsibility, as the situation here and now will influence the patient in the future. Existence extends outside the room and the situation, which means that the team meeting must be seen in a larger context, including the patient’s life as a whole as well as the ontological and epistemological foundations upon
which healthcare is based. Acknowledgements We thank Helena Dahlberg for insightful remarks and sensible reflections. Conflict of interest and funding The authors have not received any funding or benefits from industry or elsewhere to conduct this study.
Scalp hair has greater psychological and social importance than biological significance. Alopecia areata (AA) refers to unexpected patchy PDK4 hair loss and can result in a distinctive change in appearance. Alopecia totalis refers to loss of all scalp hair, and alopecia universalis to the loss of all body hair. Here we refer to these three forms as AA. The experience of AA leads to numerous personal, social, and occupational problems (Hunt & McHale, 2005). Adolescence is a time of internal turmoil and upheaval, and having to face a visible disfigurement at this transitional period can be extremely challenging. Adolescence is a period of major physical changes and emotional turmoil which can lead to reduced self-confidence, shyness, and anxiety resulting in academic, personal, and social pressures (Shulman, Carlton-Ford, Levian, & Hed, 1995). Having to also live with a physically altering condition as AA may bring additional psychosocial concerns in these adolescents.