Buch, Englisch, 258 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 379 g
The End of Life: Hospice and Palliative Care
Buch, Englisch, 258 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 379 g
Reihe: Death, Value and Meaning Series
ISBN: 978-0-89503-866-1
Verlag: Routledge
Section Two, "Facing End of Life and Its Care," begins with Gilbert's chapter presenting a strong argument that caregivers need to honour the multiple tracks that come with dying while maintaining a focus on the wishes of the dying person. He offers ways for the team to better meet the needs of the dying person. Koppleman (Chapter 8) follows the journey of a friend who faced death. It is a powerful story, told from the point of view of the dying in a scholarly fashion. Smith and Potter (Chapter 9) suggest that palliative care for the dying can be defined as offering "comfort care," both for those who are dying and for their loved ones. The authors present a model of the psycho-spiritual side of palliative care as a way of offering comfort to all those involved. Adams (Chapter 10) examines different methods of working with patients and families. It looks at the ways in which such work can be complicated by factors of geographic distance, differences in family reactions, differences in treatment plan concepts, and in meaning making. All of these factors may become stumbling blocks and may prevent the delivery of positive support. Pizzini (Chapter 11) looks at the experience of dying in prison from the perspective of inmates who are terminally ill, prison medical staff, and prison security staff. She discusses how to maintain dignity of the dying and a "good death" while in prison. McCord (Chapter 12) discusses attempts by hospice patients and others diagnosed with terminal illnesses to die either by their own hand or with physician assistance. She presents common risk factors, strategies to assess the degree of risk and possible plans for suicide and suicide postvention in the context of hospice.
Section Three, "Cultural Considerations in End-of-Life Care" begins with The End of Life: Two Perspectives in which Robert G. Stevenson looks at two perspectives on the end of life that are not often examined in terms of their impact on the individual and his/her attitude toward this time. The two perspectives are that of adolescents, and that are shown in a military ceremony used in the 18th and 19th centuries, the Feu de Joie or Fire of Joy. In Chapter Fourteen, Janet McCord discusses suicide attempts by hospice patients and others diagnosed with terminal illnesses to die either by their own hand or with physician assistance. Connor's description of the need for hospice and palliative care around the world and the challenges of developing palliative care globally, and offers models that can be used around the world. Cox and Cox (Chapter 15) suggest ways to offer end-of-life care to Roman Catholics who do not fit the traditional model of hospice care and examine special needs, theology, and rituals. Cox and Sullivan (Chapter 16) offer suggestions on end-of-life care for American Indians, explaining cultural differences among American Indians and suggesting ways to improve care to a group that is generally neglected in hospice care. Smith (Chapter 17) looks at the cultural differences and understandings of Fundamentalist Christian views of a "good death" and the afterlife, ways to negotiate faith understandings that complicate end-of-life care, and ways to comfort individuals who may be marginalised because they do not share the theological views of the dying individual or key family members.
Zielgruppe
Professional Practice & Development
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
SECTION 1 Professional Applications in End-of-Life Care
CHAPTER 1 Existential Empathy: Caregiver Understanding of Patients’ Religious Beliefs at the End-of-Life
Joseph M. Currier, Miyoung Yoon Hammer, and Robert A. Neimeyer
CHAPTER 2 Attachments and Losses: Individual and Global Perspectives
Colin Murray Parkes
CHAPTER 3 The Private Worlds of Professionals, Teams, and Organizations in Palliative Care
Danai Papadatou
CHAPTER 4 Honoring Relationship in Pediatric Palliative Care
Kathie Kobler
CHAPTER 5 Meeting the Stress Challenge
Neil Thompson and Denise Bevan
CHAPTER 6 When Birth and Death Collide: Best Practices in End-of-Life at the Beginning
Lori Ives-Baine, Jessica Faust, Jessica Drewry, Jatinder Kalra, Michael Marshall, Roop Johal, and Alyson Mayne
SECTION 2 Facing End-of-Life and Its Care
CHAPTER 7 To Be is To Be, and the Do-ing Should Follow
Richard B. Gilbert
CHAPTER 8 Stepping Through the Looking Glass into “Cancer World”
Kent Koppelman
CHAPTER 9 The Psycho-Spiritual Side of Palliative Care: Two Stories and Ten Transformations Toward Healing
Douglas C. Smith and Conley M. Potter
CHAPTER 10 "And the Sun Refused to Shine"
Susan Adams
CHAPTER 11 The Experience of Dying in Prison
Nicole Pizzini
CHAPTER 12 The "Other" Kind of Pain: Understanding Suicide in the Context of End-of-Life Care
Janet S. McCord
CHAPTER 13 The End of Life: Two Perspectives
Robert G. Stevenson
SECTION 3 Cultural Considerations
CHAPTER 14 Palliative Care is a Human Right
Stephen R. Connor
CHAPTER 15 Spirituality in End-of-Life Care: A Roman Catholic Perspective
Gerry R. Cox and Rev. Christopher W. Cox
CHAPTER 16 Grief and the American Indian
Gerry R. Cox and Andrea R. Sullivan
CHAPTER 17 “It Will Do When I Am Dying”: Navigating the Nuances of Fundamentalist Christianity’s Understandings of Death and Dying
Harold Ivan Smith
Meet the Contributors
Index