Rescue Fantasy as a Source of MeaningThis article explores the inner conflict faced by palliative care professionals—between the medical instinct to preserve life and the reality of a field where saving life is often impossible. In medicine, the ‘rescue fantasy’ describes a caregiver’s strong desire to restore health, to bring the patient back to life, and to overcome illness. In palliative care, this urge inevitably conflicts with other priorities: alleviating pain, maintaining dignity, supporting families, and helping patients find meaning. The study shows that palliative care professionals do not abandon the rescue fantasy—instead, they transform it. Rather than trying to ‘save life’, they aim to improve its quality by providing comfort, relieving suffering, and helping patients stay true to themselves until the end. The same change applies to supporting families: helping them cope with emotional pain becomes another meaningful form of ‘rescue’. The authors argue that such fantasies should not be suppressed but understood as a constructive source of professional purpose and resilience—helping clinicians stay engaged and compassionate in their daily encounters with death.
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https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/07481187.2025.2510480#abstract