Adolescent hopefulness in illness and health
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Advances in Nursing Science
- Vol. 10 (3), 79-88
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00012272-198804000-00009
Abstract
Hopefulness is believed to be a significant element in the human response to illness, but its clinical impact has not been documented due to conceptual and operational difficulties. This article generates a definition of hopefulness from well and ill adolescents. The study's conceptual orientation included the beliefs that hope is a contributing factor in health maintenance and is especially vital for individuals experiencing life-threatening illness. Grounded theory methodology was used. Interviews, observations and health records were data sources. Data were analyzed during the cross-comparative method. A panel approach was used to assess the reliability and validity of the induced categories. Theoretical saturation on a definition was achieved. Adolescents with cancer had a dimension in the definition not found in the other two groups. The added dimension had a focus on “others” in contrast to only “self.”Keywords
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