The Value of Implicitness: An Empirical Ethics Analysis of Indonesian Everyday Family Involvement in a Palliative Care Setting
Raditya Bagas Wicaksono, Amalia Muhaimin, Dick L. Willems, Jeannette Pols

TL;DR
In Indonesia, families rely on implicit communication in palliative care, which can both help and hinder caregiving due to unspoken expectations.
Contribution
This study introduces the concept of implicitness as a key ethical and practical factor in Indonesian family caregiving dynamics.
Findings
Implicitness shapes expectations about family involvement in care and financial support.
Implicitness preserves harmony but can lead to hidden tensions and hinder care quality.
Families resolve issues by sharing problems with health professionals or accepting difficult circumstances.
Abstract
The lack of professional support for patients needing palliative care in Indonesia leads to a heavier reliance on family members for care. However, family tensions often arise from unmet expectations about support from other family members. This study explores implicitness, which we describe as the use of indirect or unspoken methods to communicate messages. We argue that the value of implicitness strongly influences the communication of these expectations and affects family caregiving dynamics. This paper aims to discuss the hidden expectations shaped by implicitness, what makes it an important value in family care, its ethical implications, and strategies for resolving the problems that arise from it. We conducted ethnographic fieldwork in Banyumas, Indonesia, involving in-depth interviews, home observations, and focus group discussions with patients, families, and health…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health · Patient Dignity and Privacy
