Medicine and Society
Whole-Person, Whole-Community Care at the End of Life
Christina Staudt, PhD
Dying is a Human and Communal Experience, Not a Medical Event
As human beings, we are programmed from birth to grow and develop in
all our dimensions—biological, social, psychological, spiritual—to
change, and to die. A small percent of us die suddenly and unexpectedly
without previous warning, but the vast majority of us today experience
dying as a process characterized by progressive illness or gradual
frailty. Making the now all-but-universal experience of deteriorating
and eventually dying as comfortable and as rich as possible for each
person and those closest to her is an ethical responsibility of
caregivers and the community, as well as an opportunity for all involved
to advance in knowledge and compassion.
To live as well as possible until the end requires more than
attention to our bodies. One’s whole being participates in the process
of living and ending life. The totality of who we are needs care.
Physicians have always had a role at the end of life, but during the
last half century medical care has so overtaken all aspects of the dying
process that we mistakenly have come to assume that death is a disease
and dying a medical condition [1].
We are social animals who live and die in social settings with
particular histories and traditions. With changes in the stages of life,
our roles in our families, our social circles, and community life
evolve. Old bonds may be broken and new ones forged; our vision of what
is meaningful often changes; and we are likely to grow increasingly
aware of the looming end. We may seek transcendence, focus on personal
relationships, become concerned about leaving legacies, or try to ignore
what is happening to us. We may feel anxious at the prospect of dying
or we may look forward and backward with a sense of fulfillment. These
feelings and ruminations may be common among people of advanced ages or
those facing serious illness, but they may also be present in someone
who is still young and active.
Who Is Dying?
Before we consider what care is appropriate for “the dying,” we need
to identify who they are. Individuals who are in their last days or
hours and exhibit common signs of “actively dying” are comparatively
easy to recognize [2], but this description only fits those in the
ultimate stage of the dying process. How would we have characterized
these people a week earlier, or a month, or a year? When is it warranted
to start thinking of a person as “at the end of life” and decide that
it is time for “end-of-life care”?
Reflecting on this, it becomes clear there is no “trigger point”—in
years lived or disease progression—when the process of “dying” can be
said to begin. Since birth, all of us are on a trajectory to death with
the potential of the process speeding up or slowing down. Healthy people
have a straight downward sloping trajectory to the date set by
actuarial tables until illness strikes (or creeps up) and the curve
changes [3]. Hence, “end-of-life care” should not be separated from a
continuum of care that begins at birth and varies over time according to
individual need. A continuum of care is ongoing across time, across
diagnoses, across medical, custodial, and supplementary care providers,
and across family units and community support groups. Good end-of-life
care manifests as the intensification of care that is, ideally, already
and always ongoing.
The Needs of the Dying
Those who have the end in sight are still living [4]. As human
beings, albeit in the last stage of life, their needs are not so
different from the needs of the rest of us. They have ordinary needs
that require special, sometimes extraordinary, support. All of us,
presumably, like to live in a dignified manner, in a safe environment,
free of pain and troubling symptoms, with clean bodies and clothing,
appropriately hydrated and nourished, in nurturing and loving
relationships, with the right amount of mental stimulation, and at peace
with ourselves and the world. Although these needs may not be
exceptional, the hurdles to achieve them may increase as illness and
frailty set in, and the urgency with which they must be satisfied may be
magnified as life constricts toward its end.
To learn how we can provide the necessary enhanced support, we have
to look beyond medical care to a multidimensional solution. People at
the end of life—and those close to them—need assistance with the
activities of daily living—dressing, bathing, getting on and off the
toilet, cooking and cleaning, managing bill payments, and completing
insurance forms. Access to transportation and a wheelchair-friendly
residence outfitted with handrails and a hospital bed become critical.
Friendly companions safeguard against depression. Pain and symptom
management are essential, but existential suffering can be as burdensome
as physical discomfort. A chaplain or someone else to talk to about
meaning, value, and connectedness can be indispensable.
Whether we remain in our private homes or move into residential
facilities, being part of a caring community fosters satisfaction [5].
We seek dignity and respect, and the best quality of life possible,
according to how we as individuals and members of our cultural groups
perceive those concepts, based on our traditions and values. Conveying I see you, I hear you, I value you
goes a long way when caring for someone who is losing functionality.
This is when the full humanity of the individual is often ignored and
the medical diagnosis dominates all interaction. As caregivers we need
to be receptive to the whole person, her story, and her wishes and hopes
for the time that remains. We show that we value her by supporting her
according to her wishes and our professional or personal
roles—mitigating pain, explaining insurance forms, treating pressure
sores, ensuring hygiene, preparing meals and feeding, reading a book,
performing a ritual, sitting quietly and holding a hand—but also by
fully “being with” as much as “doing.” “Being with suffering” is the
root meaning of “compassion,” and, regardless of our relationships to
the dying person, the underlying nature of our response needs to be one
of compassion and love.
Meeting the Needs in an Integrated Service System
To effectuate appropriate care, the receptive and responsive
caregiver needs to be part of a coordinated network of services that
takes into account the families and communities that are affected by the
approaching death. Joanne Lynn argues that we should start by looking
at need, rather than a system of care to which the individual is
made to conform [6]. To accomplish this goal, the current health care
system would need to be reformed in multiple ways. Fees for services, a
general lack of advance directives, and the default practice of “full
code” regardless of the age or health status of the patient are among
the most problematic practices [7, 8].
In meeting the needs of those with progressive serious illness and
frailty, the most promising health care models are currently hospice
care and palliative care. The Medicare hospice benefit mandates a
coordinated care team: physicians and nurses manage pain and symptoms;
social workers navigate the social service system, answer insurance
questions, and offer counseling; aides assist with activities of daily
living; chaplains address spiritual needs; and trained volunteers
provide social interactions and perform nonprofessional chores. Speech,
occupational, and physical therapists and necessary pharmaceuticals to
keep the patient comfortable are also included in the benefit. In
addition, many hospices provide massage, Reiki, pet, and music therapy,
among other complementary services that enhance the patient’s well-being
[9]. Palliative care is defined as a philosophy and a system of care,
an interdisciplinary care system that embraces the whole person as well
as the surrounding family, and potentially the whole community [10, 11].
Palliative medicine is the medical component of palliative care.
Almost half of the people who die in the United States receive
hospice services in their dying hours [12]. Because the hospice benefit
requires that the patient forgo curative treatment and that a physician
certify that life expectancy is less than 6 months, many who could
benefit from the support by enrolling early hesitate; more than a third
of hospice patients enroll only for the last several days of life [13].
One reason for the late referrals to hospice is many physicians’
reluctance to recognize that their task has changed from seeking disease
improvement and cure to offering comfort care. Palliative care services
are designed to meet this challenge by creating an additional layer of
care that can be provided without the patient’s forgoing curative
treatments. Palliative care services can be as comprehensive as hospice
services but are often circumscribed due to current restrictions in the
reimbursement system.
An expansion of insurance payments for palliative care services and
reforms to better align hospice care with a continuum of care appear to
offer the best short-term prospects for meeting the health care needs of
the dying under our current insurance system. Regardless of when such
reforms may occur, other changes can be initiated among caregivers and
among the general public on a broad societal level. All social services
and all communal life across the life span potentially intersect with
good end-of-life care.
Expanding Roles of Care Providers
Medical and other professional caregivers share the responsibility of
all citizens to work for a whole-person, whole-community approach to
care. This means being open to integrating our own care system with
other support systems and allowing the breaking down of traditional
separations among domains that designate and circumscribe who is
responsible for what aspect of the care. When disease-modifying measures
are no longer possible, the roles among the medical team members shift
as the palliative medicine experts enter or become more dominant in the
care. Controlling pain and alleviating symptoms are the most important
services that medicine can offer at the end of life [14]. However, many
patients worry about insulting their primary or disease-specific
physicians if they suggest that their pain is not well managed and that
they want to consult a pain specialist. This can be avoided if the
attending physician suggests a referral to a palliative medicine
specialist him- or herself.
A comprehensive support plan for the final journey, which goes beyond
the traditional care plan, needs to be drawn up by a professional
caregiver who looks at the whole person and those closest to her. In
addition to medical directives, the values and wishes of the patient
should be included, as well as custodial arrangements and other matters
of importance to the patient. The plan should note favorite activities
(and substitutes if they are no longer possible), preferences about
dress and skin care products, when visitors are welcome, and what gifts
are well received. Such details may strike the clinician who is
grappling with a complex disease situation as incidental, but to the
patient whose functionality is deteriorating they can be sources of
comfort and pleasure [15, 16].
Home care medicine is gaining inroads in certain states and showing
positive results [17]. Increased volumes of home visits by palliative
care-trained physicians, nurse practitioners, and nurses are a positive
development for end-of life care. Along with a return to the physician
house call may come a return to a personal and empathic relationship
between the physician and his or her patients. Medical schools
increasingly recognize the need for physicians to communicate more
effectively and empathically with their patients [18]. Good bedside
manners include taking time with patients [19], being generous about
consulting colleagues, and being careful not to medicalize all
suffering. Forgiveness, gratitude, sorrow, and love belong in the room
of the dying individual, and these sentiments need to be
acknowledged—when appropriate—by the visiting physician as well as by
the chaplain and grief counselor.
Possibly the most important action that physicians—including disease
specialists—can take to show their empathy, especially after treatments
have ceased to have disease-improving effect, is to remain in contact, not
to abandon the patient and her family. The physician’s training and
experience endow her with authority. We need our trusted doctors to be
with us in shared—even wordless—humanity when we struggle with leaving
this life. It matters who the doctor is and how she acts [20].
Outside the field of medicine, other professional institutions and
community organizations are initiating and expanding care models, which
serve the whole person at the end of life. Education of health care
advocates and case managers increasingly includes tools to help families
navigate the final journey and locate helpful resources [21]. Training
of doulas for the dying—people who offer practical, emotional, and
spiritual support but whose primary role is being available as
experienced, reassuring presences when someone is “actively dying”—is in
its infancy but a growing field [22]. Not-for-profit organizations and
faith groups have stepped up their training of “friendly visitor”
programs and volunteer drivers [23-27]. Community and professional
associations are promoting and creating appropriate educational programs
and certification so that these new vocations can become part of a
formalized system, similar to the aides with specialized end-of-life
training who are now available through licensed or certified home health
agencies [28, 29]. The advocacy work is in its early stage but is
gaining momentum in large part through caregiver associations and other
lay entities [30].
Beyond Integrated Service Models
As discussed, comprehensive, integrated end-of-life care involves
adding a layer of palliative care to current medical practices and
expanding traditional caregiver roles. Additionally it requires breaking
down the “silos” of care to better manage patient transfers among the
different care settings of home, hospital, and nursing home [31, 32].
Further, it entreats us to embrace innovative ideas and, ultimately,
rethink traditional service systems.
A fundamental hurdle to comprehensive care is the existing strict
separation on the managerial and financial level between health care and
whole-person (social) care systems. Separate funding sources and a lack
of coordination among providers lead to deficiencies, inefficiencies,
and, often, high overall costs. Currently in the United States, the
expense for repairing a broken leg—a medical necessity—is covered by
Medicare (and most insurance companies), but preventive measures, such
as reviews of a private residence and removal of slippery rugs and other
hazards are rarely covered or subsidized [33]. A hip replacement is
paid for but, in general, reimbursement is not available for custodial
care such as assistance with bathing and dressing, shopping and cooking
when the patient gets home, making the recovery period difficult [34].
Comprehensive, coordinated care has proven to be both cost-effective and
beneficial to patients in foreign countries as well as in selected
projects and entities within the United States [35-41].
Whole-community care also entails many social services that respond
to a variety of needs (e.g., transportation, daycare) and extend
seamlessly into the end of life. If good, communal childcare services
and after-school programs are available, they provide a measure of
ongoing stability for the family as a parent struggles with treatments
and worries about the prognosis and the prospect of arranging care for
her children after her death. If good public and subsidized
transportation and housing are in place for the disabled, elderly, and
poor, these services can be made accessible to those newly diagnosed
with a terminal illness without creating new systems of care. Such
structural reforms may be difficult to achieve in the current political
climate. We can nevertheless envision—and work for—a network of care
that spreads on the grassroots level and reaches into the life of the
community [42].
Advocating for Political and Social Change
As members of a political system and a civil society that empower us
by law and tradition, we can all act to effect positive change in the
end-of-life experience. If we believe in reforming our care system so it
responds to the needs of the individual—and not vice versa—then we have
to advocate and work for improvements. We have constitutional ways to
promote favorable legislation and appropriation on the federal, state,
and county government level, and we can join groups that educate and
advocate around these issues [43]. We can, for example, urge our
political representatives to support legislation that reimburses
end-of-life conversations between physicians and their patients [44] and
we can lobby for a more flexible reimbursement system that breaks down
the boundaries between medical and social support services. We have
access to faith congregations, social media, and cultural entities to
share our experiences and knowledge, and to encourage our families,
friends, and colleagues to engage in a whole-person, whole-community
approach to end-of-life care. All of us have a stake in the outcome and
we also have an ethical responsibility to engage in improving the care
of others.
Experience and the literature have shown that successful integration
and coordination among entities occur when projects are initiated from
the ground level, rather than imposed from the top; when collaborations
are undertaken among service providers at the local level; and when all
stakeholders are included [45]. These basic tenets indicate that the
healthy general public must be roused in the quest for an optimal care
system.
Preparing Ourselves
We will all one day die and we will want to receive appropriate care.
Thus all of us age 18 and older should complete an advance directive
assigning health care agents to represent us in case we lose capacity.
We teach teenagers about the perils of drugs and unprotected sex; we
also need to make sure that our 18-year-olds have conversations with
their parents, siblings, and doctors about whom they would want to speak
for them if they lost capacity to make health care decisions for
themselves.
Widespread conversations about our wishes at the end may be the most
effective ways to promote improved end-of-life care on a personal and
communal level. Designating an agent provides a natural opportunity for a
conversation about care preferences with the agent and family members
and to share thoughts about the kind of care that would be desired at
the end. The advance directives we give to our health care agents may
change as time goes by, so conversations need to be repeated when our
circumstances alter or our physical conditions deteriorate [46, 47]. If
we get serious progressive illnesses and when we become frail and
elderly, in-depth conversations about life-sustaining measures become
critical. At that point, a physician needs to document our wishes and,
if appropriate, prepare portable documents with medical orders stating
them [48].
Beyond these basics, we can help ourselves and our families by
creating a personal “goals-of-life” plan. Such a plan covers what we
would want for ourselves if we were given a limited time to live, say, a
final year, final month, or final few days. It includes where we would
want to be and with whom, doing what [49]. If all adults became
accustomed to considering such things, responding when a similar
situation occurred would be easier. The majority of us will have to face
how we want to live when we are elderly and frail and—not unlikely—have
multiple medical conditions. Many of us will lose capacity and need to
rely on others to make decisions for us.
The “goals-of-life” plan differs from a traditional care plan in that
it is the patient, in conversation with his or her intimates, who
initiates and develops the plan. Creating the plan is almost akin to a
parlor game [50], but the product serves well as the foundation of a
future personalized “support plan.” The “goals-of-life” exercise is like
a fire drill. The real-life situation will never compare exactly to the
training sessions but stark panic might be replaced by a sense of
knowing some of the necessary action steps. The plan may be revised with
our evolving circumstances and health status but, with ongoing
conversations, we and our loved ones will have an idea of our wishes and
can advocate for them with enhanced confidence.
In Conclusion
As members of the general public and as lay and professional
caregivers, we need to acquire “end-of-life competence.” We need to
become comfortable around those who are living in their last days and
show them compassion. We need to allow them to enter into our individual
and communal lives by working for major systemic change and by
performing small, daily acts of kindness—and by being available and
present when the need arises.
The cultivation of compassion may be our most powerful tool in the
quest to improve the end-of-life experience for the person who is dying
and those closest to her [51]. The possibility of creating a more
compassionate society may sound farfetched, but attitudes and values
change over time, sometimes remarkably quickly [52]. Witness broadly
accepted changes in attitudes towards civil rights and corporeal
punishments in schools during the last half-century. Acts of compassion
can be fostered on a personal level and have a communal effect [53]. The
ability to listen and respond with sensitivity, to be caring and
empathic, is not the exclusive domain of any particular profession. It
is a skill set that everyone can acquire.
References
- “Death is not a disease and dying is not a medical condition” is a useful mantra for all professional and family caregivers. (The phrase has been attributed, possibly mistakenly, to Sherwin B. Nuland in Gonzales MJ. But You Look So Good…: Stories by Carcinoid Cancer Survivors. Bloomington, IN: iUinverse; 2013.)
- Signs of “actively dying” may include some or all of the following: changes in mental states (withdrawal from social contact, long periods of sleep, drowsiness, hallucinations, confusion); no interest in food or drink; restlessness, agitation, fidgetiness, jerkiness; changes in skin temperature and color (cold, “waxen” extremities, purple or pink “mottles”); changes in urine and bowels (reduced output, urine with dark color or strong odor, constipation, incontinence); changes in breathing patterns; “rattling” sound (from mucus collecting in throat).
- Diseases such as many cancers often create a fairly even, accelerated downward slope. Chronic illnesses such as heart disease and other organ failures manifest as intermittent episodes that bring the patient back to a lower level of functioning after each episode with no clear indication of when the final episode may occur. Dementia, strokes, and general frailty with aging have a slow, uneven, and difficult-to-predict trajectory. Charts of these trajectories and sources documenting them appear in Murray SA, Kendall M, Sheikh A. Illness trajectories and palliative care. BMJ. 2005;330(7498):1007-1011 fig. 1. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/ articles/PMC557152. Accessed October 25, 2013.
- This is recognized in the slogan of a campaign formulated by Caring Connections, a project by the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, “It’s About How You Live” (Caring Connections. It’s About How You LIVE Campaign. http://www.caringinfo.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=3380. Accessed October 28, 2013.) and in the title of Ira Byock’s book about the last period of life: Byock I. The Four Things That Matter Most—A Book About Living. New York: Free Press; 2004.
- Most people want to die at home surrounded by friends and family (Fischer S, Min SJ, Cervantes L, Kutner JS. Where do you want to spend your last days of life? Low concordance between preferred and actual site of death among hospitalized adults. J Hosp Med 2013;8(4):178-183), but the requirements of those for whom this is not desirable or feasible also need to be met.
- Lynn J. Sick To Death and Not Going to Take It Anymore!: Reforming Health Care for the Last Years of Life. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press; 2004:43.
- Numerous authors have addressed these issues, notably Daniel Callahan over the last forty years. See Callahan D. The Tyranny of Survival and Other Pathologies of Civilized Life. New York: MacMillan; 1973.
- Callahan D. Prognosis, costs, and end-of-life care. In: Staudt C, Ellens JH, eds. New Paths of Engagement. Santa Barbara CA: Praeger; 2013. Our Changing Journey to the End: Reshaping Death, Dying, and Grief in America, vol 1.
- For further information about the Medicare Hospice Benefit, see Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Medicare hospice benefits. http://www.medicare.gov/Pubs/pdf/ 02154.pdf. Almost all states offer the hospice benefit to Medicaid patients under similar rules as the Medicare Hospice Benefit. Hospices also usually accept private insurance.
- An excellent information resource on palliative care for professional caregivers is the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC) website. http://www.capc.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- An informational resource for consumers is CAPC’s subsidiary project Get Palliative Care website. http://www.getpalliativecare.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization. NHPCO Facts and Figures: Hospice Care in America. 2012; 4. Accessed August 24, 2013. http://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/ files/public/Statistics_Research/ 2012_Facts_Figures.pdf. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, 5.
- Among David Kessler’s list of 16 “needs for the dying,” he includes two related needs that require medical training: “The need for continuing medical care, even though the goals may change from ‘cure’ to ‘comfort care’” and “The need to be free of physical pain.” Kessler D. The Needs of the Dying—A Guide for Bringing Hope, Comfort and Love to Life’s Final Chapter. New York: Harper Collins; 2007: xiii.
- For suggestion on how to draw up such plans, see, for example, EndLink. Module 7, goals of care. http://endlink.lurie.northwestern.edu/ eolc_goals_of_care.cfm. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Sanderson H, Lewis J. A Practical Guide to Delivering Personalisation: Person-Centred Practice in Health and Social Care. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers; 2011.
- Different models are summarized in Emanuel EJ. Hi, it’s your doctor. Opinionator; New York Times. September 5, 2013. http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes. com/2013/09/05/hi-its-your-doctor/?_r=1. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- An example of this is the Program in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, exploring the intersection between health care and personal narrative, and training health care workers to see the patient’s perspective.
- One study has shown that sitting down with patients increases their sense of being attended to. Swayden KJ, Anderson KK, Connelly LM, Moran JS, McMahon JK, Palmer PM. Effect of sitting vs. standing on perception of provider time at bedside: a pilot study. Patient Educ Couns. 2012;86(2):166-171.
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- Among other institutions, graduate programs in health advocacy are offered at Sarah Lawrence College and at the Center for Patient Partnerships of the University of Wisconsin; Stanford School of Medicine has a patient advocacy program for undergraduate students. All have aspects of their programs addressing the patient at the end of life.
- Training programs vary but have many of the same components as those for hospice volunteers. See, for example, A Gentle Guide to Accompany the Dying. http://www.agentleguide.com. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Jewish Association Serving the Aging. http://jasa.org/volunteering/ friendly-visiting. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Neighbor to Neighbor Network. Friendly visitor (adopt-a-grandparent) program. http://www.volunteerntnn.org/ Friendly_Visitor.html. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Council on Aging. Friendly visitor program. http://councilonaging.com/?page_id=78. Accessed October 28, 2013.
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- For a list of family caregiver advocacy groups, see Caregiver Action Network. Caregiver organizations, information, advocacy and support resources. http://caregiveraction.org/resources/ agencies/#care. Accessed October 28, 2013.
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- Next Step in Care website. http://www.nextstepincare.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- The importance of such reviews is widely acknowledged and includes recommendations by the government. Department of Health and Human Services. Preventing falls at home. http://www.eldercare.gov/Eldercare.NET/ Public/Resources/Brochures/docs/ Preventing_Falls_Brochure_pagebypage.pdf. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Patients who are eligible for both Medicaid and Medicare have free access to medical and residential care in nursing homes in most states but are only to a limited extent provided the often, cheaper option of care in the home with extensive custodial support. Limited financial aid is available for patients on Medicaid in some states, and some states have additional financial support programs also for those who are not Medicaid eligible. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. What’s not covered by Medicare. http://www.medicare.gov/what-medicare-covers/ not-covered/item-and-services-not-covered- by-part-a-and-b.html. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- AHRQ Health Care Innovations Exchange. System-integrated program coordinates care for people with advanced illness, leading to greater use of hospice services, lower utilization and costs, and high satisfaction. http://www.innovations.ahrq. gov/content.aspx?id=3370. Accessed October 28, 2013.
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- Bruce Jennings has coined the term “civic palliative care” in an article that calls for responsible ethical action by our citizenry. See Jennings B. Solidarity, mortality: the tolling bell of civic palliative care. In: Staudt C, Ellens JH, eds. New Venues in the Search for Dignity and Grace. Santa Barbara CA: Praeger, 2013. Our Changing Journey to the End Reshaping Death, Dying, and Grief in America; vol 2.
- Among not-for-profit organizations that engage in finding sustainable solutions to this problem is Altarum Institute. Altarum Institute website. http://www.altarum.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) has repeatedly tried to introduce a bill in the House of Representatives that would require Medicare coverage for an optional end-of-life consultation between a patient and a doctor every 5 years, more often if the health of the person deteriorates. Span P. A renewed push for end-of-life discussions. The New Old Age; NewYork Times. August 28, 2013. http://newoldage.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/08/28/ death-panels-this-time-maybe-not-so-scary/?_r=0. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- See for example, Cameron A, Lart R, Bostock L, Coomber C. Factors that promote and hinder joint and integrated working between health and social care services: a review of research literature. Health Soc Care Community. 2013. [Epub ahead of print].
- The Conversation Project website. http://theconversationproject.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Prosch T. The Other Talk: A Guide to Talking with Your Adult Children about the Rest of Your Life. New York: McGraw-Hill Education; 2014.
- The medical orders go under different names in different states: POLST (Physician’s Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment), MOLST (Medical Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment), MOST (Medical Orders for Scope of Treatment), and POST (Physician’s Orders for Scope of Treatment). The Conversation Project offers useful hints about discussing these matters with a physician. The Conversation Project. How to talk to your doctor (or any member of your health care team). http://theconversationproject.org/wp-content/ uploads/2013/01/TCP-TalkToYourDoctor.pdf. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- A popular guide that can be helpful in thinking about these questions is Levine S. A Year to Live: How to Live this Year As if It Were Your Last. New York: Random House; 1997.
- Death Over Dinner is an imaginative online tool with game style elements to help start conversations about death and dying. Death Over Dinner website. http://deathoverdinner.org. Accessed October 28, 2013.
- Halifax J. Being with Dying: Cultivating Compassion and Fearlessness in the Presence of Death. Boston: Shambhala, 2009.
- Peer pressure is deemed a key ingredient. See Rosenberg T. Join the Club: How Peer Pressure Can Transform the World. New York: WW Norton; 2011.
- A practical and insightful handbook such as Karen Armstrong’s Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life (New York: Random House; 2010) could effect remarkable change if its guidelines were broadly adopted.
Christina Staudt, PhD,
is the chair of the Columbia University Seminar on Death and the
president of the Westchester End-of-Life Coalition. She has been a
hospice volunteer for 15 years, with a primary focus on attending to the
actively dying and their families.
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