Autobiografiske berøringsøyeblikk
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24681Date
2021Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Wackers, GerAbstract
Autobiographic moments of touch. This article explores the meaning and potential of touch in palliative care, viewed in light of the dominance in ethical and legal thinking of conscious life experience, autonomy and cognitive competence to consent. Four moments of touch from the author’s biography illustrate that touch is valuable in various forms om care for persons who do not in sufficient degree meet the necessary conditions for conscience life experience. The four moments pertain to premature and newborn children, «snoezelen» and multisensory gardens for multi-handicapped children, a touch deficient death in an institution and a touch rich home death. A culturally conditioned hierarchy that ranks the frontal cortex higher than the emotional brain, and sight and hearing higher that the haptic sense has caused that touch based forms of care have been implemented in palliative end-of-life care only to a small degree.