Berger ls 7e epilogue

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Kathleen Stassen Berger 1 Epilogue Death and Dying Death and Hope Dying and Acceptance Bereavement

Transcript of Berger ls 7e epilogue

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Kathleen Stassen Berger

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Epilogue

Death and Dying

Death and Hope

Dying and Acceptance

Bereavement

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Death and Dying

• Thanatology is the study of death and dying, especially social and emotional aspect.

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Death and Hope• What is death?–a end or a beginning–a private and personal event–a part of the larger culture–something to deny or avoid–something to welcome

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Death Through the Life Span

Child’s viewAdulthoodLate Adulthood

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Death in Childhood• children as young as 2 have some understanding of death, but their perspective differs from that of older family members

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Death in Adulthood

• a major shift in attitude about death occurs when adults become responsible for work and family

• death is not romanticized, but dreaded as something to be avoided or at least postponed

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Death in Late Adulthood

• in late adulthood, anxiety about death decreases

• a sign of mental health in older adults is acceptance of their mortality

• older people write their wills, designate health proxies---performing these actions does not mean that they have given up on life

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Many Religions, Many Cultures• Views of Death in Major

Religions–Buddhism–Hinduism – touching the floor–Native American Traditions–Judaism – sitting shiva–Christianity–Islam – clean body

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Elisabeth Kübler-Ross

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Dying and Acceptance• A good death is one that is peaceful and quick and occurs at the end of along life, in familiar surrounding with family and friend present and without pain, confusion, or discomfort

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Dying and Acceptance• Attending to the Needs of the Dying– Honest Conversation– The Hospice

•an institution in which terminally ill patients receive palliative care

– Comfort Care•palliative care

– care designed not to treat an illness but to relieve the pain and suffering of the patient and his or her family

•double effect– an ethical situation in which a person performs an action that is good or morally neutral but has ill effects that are foreseen, though not desired

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Dying and Acceptance•Choices and Controversies– When is a Person Dead?

•passive euthanasia•do not resuscitate (DNR)–a written order from a physician (sometimes initiated by a patient’s advance directive or by a health care proxy’s request) that no attempt should be made to revive a patient if he or she suffers cardiac or respiratory arrest

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Dying and Acceptance•Choices and Controversies

– When is a Person Dead?• active euthanasia

– a situation in which someone takes action to bring about another person’s death, with the intention of ending that person's suffering» slippery slope – the argument that a given action will start a chain of events that will culminate in an undesirable outcome

• physician-assisted suicide– a form of active euthanasia in which a doctor provides the means for someone to end his or her own life

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Dying and Acceptance–The Netherlands–Oregon

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Dying and Acceptance• Advance Directives

–living will•a document that indicates what medical intervention an individual wants if he or she becomes incapable of expressing those wishes

–health care proxy•a person chosen by another person to make medical decisions if the second person becomes unable to do so

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Bereavement• Normal Grief

– Grief and Mourning•bereavement

– the sense of loss following a death

•grief– an individual's emotional response to the death of another

•mourning– the ceremonies and behavior that a religion or culture prescribes for bereaved people

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Bereavement–Seeking Blame and Meaning•a common impulse after death is for the survivor to asses blame

•the normal grief reaction is intense and irrational at first but gradually eases

•time, social support, and traditions help

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Bereavement– Complicated Grief

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Diversity of Reactions• bereaved people depend on the customs and attitudes of their culture to guide them though their irrational thoughts and personal grief