'n Narratiewe refleksie op negatiewe koronêre vatomleidingsoperasie-uitkomste: die spirituele belewenis van 'n chirurg

dc.contributor.advisorVan Zyl, G. J.
dc.contributor.advisorVan den Berg, J. A.
dc.contributor.authorSwart, Marius Johannes
dc.date.accessioned2021-05-10T11:48:34Z
dc.date.available2021-05-10T11:48:34Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.description.abstractWhat is the spiritual experience of a cardiac surgeon with regard to the negative outcomes after coronary artery bypass graft surgery? The overall goal of the study was to acknowledge the negative outcomes of some patients, to articulate it and to analyse it spiritually. The question and the overall goal were addressed by means of an autoethnographic, interdisciplinary, narrative research project. Using creative chapter titles the reader is accompanying the researcher-surgeon on a spiritual journey. The complex nature of cardiac surgery is softened with simple metaphors. From the heart the reader is introduced to the emotional and spiritual remorse the cardiac surgeon experiences with negative outcomes after coronary surgery. Much has been written about spirituality in medicine, but with modesty the missing puzzle pieces are pointed out to justify the relevance of the study. It is not the clear window of quantitative research but the soft qualitative light of the lantern that is used to explain the method of research. The researcher-surgeon‟s individual series of 1 750 patients who had a CABG is presented as a living document. The hermeneutical investigation is done with the view to spiritual transformation. Basic health and a good lifestyle that is subjected to scrutiny assume that amongst other things, leaves (salads) are to be eaten and not to be smoked (tobacco). Such a lifestyle is to a large extent a patient‟s free choice, which is part of the order of creation. As an evocative question the researchersurgeon looks again upon his image of God. God is not being questioned or proved, but God is drawn into the researcher-surgeon‟s time-space, to make sense of the negative (and positive) outcomes after CABG. In a shared Christian spirituality, using the Delphi survey, co-surgeons are invited to elucidate together on spiritual issues of practice. The researcher-surgeon‟s disappointments in practice are relieved and his image of God is strengthened. The spiritual experience of CABG outcomes can anew the confirmation of the believing surgeon that God is present as Creator and God‟s desire for a relationship with each patient who undergoes a CABG. In that sense there is spiritual value added to the many skills of cardiac surgeons.en_ZA
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11660/11047
dc.language.isoafen_ZA
dc.publisherUniversity of the Free Stateen_ZA
dc.rights.holderUniversity of the Free Stateen_ZA
dc.subjectAutoethnographyen_ZA
dc.subjectCABGen_ZA
dc.subjectFaithen_ZA
dc.subjectNarrative medicineen_ZA
dc.subjectQualitative researchen_ZA
dc.subjectReligionen_ZA
dc.subjectSpiritualityen_ZA
dc.subjectSurgeryen_ZA
dc.subjectThesis (Ph.D. (Health Sciences Education))--University of the Free State, 2014en_ZA
dc.title'n Narratiewe refleksie op negatiewe koronêre vatomleidingsoperasie-uitkomste: die spirituele belewenis van 'n chirurgen_ZA
dc.typeThesisen_ZA

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