Montanaro, Palmina2022-09-122022-09-122022-09-12http://hdl.handle.net/10393/44043http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-28256Background: Decisions about potentially life-sustaining treatment are often not raised with patients and families until end of life (if at all), and are influenced by their many relationships. Objective: Understand how patients and families' relationships impacted their experiences of making these decisions, and how healthcare philosophies impacted authors' portrayal of these experiences. Methods: Qualitative metasynthesis design. Purposeful sampling was used to select the 19 qualitative studies included. Relational ethics and meta-study (an approach to metasynthesis) guided data collection and analysis. Findings: 1) Closeness in relationships was valued. Healthcare professionals' (dis)honesty and (lack of) empathy affected closeness with patients/families; 2) Patients' identity and quality of life was considered in decisions, and was maintained through close relationships; 3) Reliance on relationships occurred for information, care and support; 4) Decision makers felt a sense of responsibility to consider their relationships when deliberating treatments; 5) Normative discourses were reflected in authors' writing.enEnd of lifeLife sustaining treatmentDecision makingPatients and familiesRelational ethicsMaking Decisions About Potentially Life-Sustaining Treatment at End of Life: A Metasynthesis Exploring Relational Dynamics and Healthcare PhilosophiesThesis