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1.
Soins Psychiatr ; 45(352): 10-12, 2024.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38719352

Dreams can be seen as a way of letting your mind wander while you're awake, an act of imagination that occurs during sleep, or a more or less chimerical imaginary representation of what you ardently hope for. In all three cases, it questions both our relationship with reality (what exists in itself) and with reality (what I perceive and understand of reality). From this point of view, dreams and madness are undeniably two experiences that radically question our access to reality.


Dreams , Reality Testing , Humans , Dreams/psychology , Female , Adult , Male , Imagination , Psychoanalytic Interpretation
2.
Rech Soins Infirm ; 138(3): 7-17, 2019 09.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31959244

The concept of others, central in philosophy, is of utmost interest in care. As an active form of concern for others, the care relationship represents a particular form of encounter with the other because of its irreducible uniqueness. What can philosophy tell us about this issue, and, in particular, what can we draw from it and use in day-to-day care practice ? Who are others ? Who am I to others ? What encounter is possible ? These three questions will therefore constitute the main theme of this article.


Patient Care , Philosophy
3.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (132): 91-98, 2018 Mar.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29771103

Despite a particularly difficult approach, Emmanuel Levinas remains a philosopher who « speaks ¼ quite naturally to caregivers. The reason is simple ; he is interested in an issue that has long been hidden in philosophy, but that directly affects care : vulnerability.However, it seems that his thinking has too often been watered down. By presenting it as a form of benevolent altruism, the radical, even subversive, aspect of the approach that he proposes to us is erased. Indeed, Levinassian responsibility is experienced first of all as a rupture, a violence that makes me the « hostage of others. ¼ According to Levinas, only the intrusion of the third imposes a limit on the relationship with the face of others. More precisely, the demand for justice vis-à-vis the third party places me in the difficult situation of having to « weigh, to think, to judge, in comparing the incomparable. ¼Levinas therefore proposes an ethics of the absolute, a hyperbolic morality that takes little account of circumstances. Would it then be betraying Levinas to seek to mitigate this responsibility, which may seem, in many respects, out of reach ?


Anxiety , Caregivers/psychology , Philosophy , Social Responsibility , Humans
4.
Soins ; 63(824): 41-43, 2018 Apr.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29680138

Care cannot simply be summed up as a standardised practice. It constitutes an ethical obligation which drives us to respond actively to the call for help from a person suffering and in need. A real call to action, this practice, both relational and technical, strives to care about others, first and foremost in terms of their ability to be in the world.


Nurse-Patient Relations , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Ethics, Nursing , Humans
5.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (124): 19-27, 2016 Mar.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27311260

In this article, the purpose is less praising Paul Ricoeur's work than enlightening how the reader may actually find some practical, even operative help in this philosophical thought. This is particularly true regarding the fields of medicine and care. Paul Ricœur is now worldwide renowned as a major philosophical figure of the 20th century, and with books such as "Oneself as another", he occupies a very peculiar place at the crossroads of phenomenology and hermeneutics. Through both these philosophical traditions, Paul Ricœur offers some narrative ethics which may greatly sustain caregivers in their reflexion. Yet, the aim of this article is to focus on this philosopher who invites us to inhabit and play a role in this world. The goal is also to bring out the pragmatic ethics that this thinker developed, based on Aristotelian and Kantian traditions. Then, this piece seeks to demonstrate how the three stages of Ricoeur's "petite éthique" (his "small ethics"), which are the self's aim "for the good life with and for others in just institutions" can shed some light on the ethical consideration of politicals and caregivers.


Ethics, Nursing , Philosophy, Nursing , Humans
6.
Rev Infirm ; (220): 19-22, 2016 Apr.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27063876

Modern medicine, with its cutting-edge technology, questions the notions of dehumanisation, over-medicalisation, the relationship to care. It seems to be aimed more at the disease than the patient. Complementary care approaches, which also encompass conventional medicine, guide and support the patient. Today, they have a role in giving back to the patient a feeling of being present in the world and testify to different approaches.


Complementary Therapies , Complementary Therapies/methods , Humanism , Humans
7.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (122): 18-25, 2015 Sep.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26685550

Down to the roots, the ethics of care have stood up a "different voice". Building on Carol Gilligan's works, the concept was developed widely in opposition with the rational and universalist aspect of Kant's moral philosophy. However, it also appears that this vision of care runs counter sets the three other main dominant moral theories, ie, utilitarism, John Rawls' procedural ethics and the Aristotelian virtue ethics. We may assert that the care theory presents itself as a contextualized moral theory aiming at taking into account others' vulnerability, in a practical way. Hence, the general term of "care" may encompass the notions of "help", "support" and "healing process", which, in France, for have often been opposed for varied reasons--historical, economical, psychological, professional etc... Switching from a moral position to a professional and practical activity, the concept of care has now undeniably taken on now a social and political dimension.


Ethics, Nursing , Nursing/standards , Politics
8.
Rev Infirm ; (191): 31-3, 2013 May.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23776983

The television series ER presents an opportunity to reflect on ethical dilemmas. This article discusses the example of an episode in which a patient suffering from an incurable disease, unable to express his views clearly, has a tracheotomy performed on him without the consent of the team or his health care proxy.


Emergency Medical Services/ethics , Morals , Television/ethics , Decision Making/ethics , Emergency Medical Services/organization & administration , Emergency Service, Hospital/ethics , Emergency Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Humans , Nurse's Role , Nurses , Workforce
9.
Soins ; (773): 24-7, 2013 Mar.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23641569

Addressing the body, nursing practice involves caring for another and the possibility for this person to be in the world. It enables the person, in spite of illness, suffering or disability, to find his or her place in the community of people. Through language, care is hospitality.


Language , Nurse-Patient Relations , Humans
10.
Rev Infirm ; (185): 32-3, 2012 Nov.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23173493

It is not easy to answer this philosophical and moral question. Care situations however unfold in a place where the spontaneity of a gift can be expressed in all simplicity through the gestures of care.


Gift Giving/ethics , Humans
11.
Soins Psychiatr ; (282): 12-5, 2012.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23050355

Understanding pain, enduring it, accepting it or detaching oneself from it: numerous philosophers have tackled this task. For suffering is existing. Suffering is part of life. Paul Ricoeur postulates a distinction between pain and suffering which relates pain to the body and suffering to reflexivity, language or the relationship with oneself. Suffering thereby becomes that through which I recognize myself and I recognize the Other.


Pain/nursing , Pain/psychology , Philosophy , Stress, Psychological/nursing , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Defense Mechanisms , Depressive Disorder/nursing , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Humans , Identification, Psychological , Individuality , Nurse-Patient Relations , Object Attachment , Quality of Life/psychology , Theory of Mind
12.
Rev Infirm ; (179): 28-9, 2012 Mar.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22506371

Confronted with a patient still able to express desires but not always able to act on them, caregivers are faced with certain questions: Should they decide for the patient and force him or her to act, as far as is possible? Should they take into account how the patient was in the past, or detach themselves from the patient's past preferences? Some answers and developments arising from a practical case.


Caregivers , Personal Autonomy , Decision Making , Humans , Patient Preference
13.
Rev Infirm ; (175): 30-2, 2011 Nov.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22206208

A new bi-monthly feature in La revue de l'Infirmière on the theme of ethics and the resulting dilemmas, so often encountered in nursing contexts. Far from being prescriptive and giving turnkey solutions, we will open the debate on ethical questioning. One which envisages the scope of possibilities and searches for the best decision for each particular situation. This first article offers elements of methodology.


Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Nurse-Patient Relations
14.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (107): 23-37, 2011 Dec.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22332500

Care has recently become a topical subject namely through the notion of care. We are quite happy with this evolution and still wonder about the reasons for this sudden interest for this essential human activity that goes back to the dawn of time. Beyond this debate, we propose to understand why care, as an essential form of response to the vulnerability of the others is necessarily in tension between three unsubstitutable elements : technics, relation and justice. The question whether our techno-scientific medicine and sanitary organization of today really contribute to care is still raised


Nursing Care , Philosophy, Nursing , Ethics, Nursing , Humans
15.
Rech Soins Infirm ; (95): 6-13, 2008 Dec.
Article Fr | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19195340

Trying to define the nature of care when you are a health care professional, means, inevitably, going back to the very source of your professional commitment. Caring, an essential form of responsibility for the other, is thus revealed as a way of behaving towards other people, as an active and concrete commitment testifying as much to the humanity of the one who gives it as to that of the one who receives it. Starting with the notion of the phenomenology of human capacity, Paul Ricoeur thinks of independence in terms of capacity. He calls upon work of the Indian economist Amartya Sen published in the 1980s on the notion of capabilities. This leads to conceiving disease or disability as a lack of elementary or basic capacity. According to Ricoeur, this notion of capacity can only be understood by looking at its contrary: vulnerability. In this way, only a weakened frail person can be called upon to become independent. Thus the human being, and particularly the ill human being, must be looked upon as both vulnerable, and thus suffering, and capable, and thus active.


Nurses , Nursing Care , Humans , Nurse-Patient Relations , Nursing Theory , Professional Autonomy , Social Responsibility
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