@article{oai:dwcla.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001931, author = {片山, 由加里 and 細田, 泰子 and 根岸, まゆみ and 土肥, 美子 and 北島, 洋子 and 赤崎, 芙美 and 米田, 真央 and KATAYAMA, Yukari and HOSODA, Yasuko and NEGISHI, Mayumi and DOI, Yoshiko and KITAJIMA, Yoko and AKASAKI, Fum and YONEDA, Mao}, journal = {総合文化研究所紀要, Bulletin of Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture Doshisha Women’s College of Liberal Arts}, month = {Jul}, note = {application/pdf, AN10052143-20200817-64, Portland, Oregon, has attracted attention in Japan as the “most desirable city to live in the United States” and “a model of urban development.” The purpose of this study was to examine nursing education in Japan through care that supports people who live and die in the community by visiting the Hopewell House Hospice in Portland. The hospice is run by approximately 70 volunteers and facility staff who provide facility care for 11 beds and about 150 home care patients. From fieldwork conducted at the facility and from an interview with the volunteer staff manager who was a former midwife and nursing manager, we found that the users and the staff themselves have “a special place called a bed,” a “record of their personality and health,” and “prayer and hope”. In addition, the nurses relied on their ingenuity to manage their environment and provide continuous care in order to reach the end stage while keeping the patient connected to the community, which facilitated feelings of joy. Nursing practice in the Hopewell House Hospice was influenced by the climate of the region and the culture of the local residents, so there was an overlap between life and death, which we believe should be incorporated into nursing education in Japan., 論文}, pages = {64--75}, title = {地域に根付く米国ホスピスのフィールドワーク:ボランティアとの協働からみた本邦の看護教育についての考察}, volume = {37}, year = {2020} }