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THE END OF LIFE

THE END OF LIFE

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Chapter 19. THE END OF LIFE. The Quest for “Healthy Dying”. Thanatology: The Study of Death and Dying. Living Will. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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THE END OF LIFE

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The Quest for “Healthy Dying”The Quest for “Healthy Dying”

Thanatology: The Study of Death and Dying

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Living WillLiving Will

A legal document that states an individual’s wishes regarding medical care in case the person becomes incapacitated and unable to participate in decisions about his or her medical care.

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The Right-to-Die MovementThe Right-to-Die Movement

Physician-Assisted Suicide Trend: basing decisions less on legalistic

interpretations regarding specific treatments and more on balancing benefits on a case-by-case basis

Euthanasia: Mercy killing

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Three concepts: (NIMH)1. Suicide ideas

2. Suicide attempts

3. Completed suicide

Who Commits Suicide and Why?Females attempt more suicides, but males complete most.

SuicideSuicide

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Provides comfort and care but with the knowledge that the recipients are nearing the end of their life’s journey--that they’re dying

The Hospice MovementThe Hospice Movement

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The Dying ProcessThe Dying Process

Defining Death

Brain Death occurs when the brain receives insufficient oxygen to function.

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A Life Review

Elderly person takes stock of his life, reflecting and reminiscing about it

Confronting One’s Own Confronting One’s Own DeathDeath

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Death drop Near-Death Experiences

– Dying individuals feel themselves leave their bodies and watch as spectators, the resuscitation efforts. Then they pass through a tunnel and enter a spiritual realm.

Changes Before DeathChanges Before Death

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Other views:– (Siegel) Arousal of nervous system and

disorganization of brain– (Alkon) Anoxia induces such mental states– (Kastenbaum) Some heart-attack victims: no

recollection of experience

Near-Death ExperiencesNear-Death Experiences

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Christian: Book of Revelation

Jewish: Speculation about afterlife is pointless

Buddhists: Detailed account

Religious BeliefsReligious Beliefs

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(Elisabeth Kubler-Ross)

1. Denial

2. Anger

3. Bargaining

4. Depression

5. Acceptance

Stages of DyingStages of Dying

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It is the nature of the disease that determines pain, mobility and length of terminal period.

Other factors:– Gender, ethnic group, personality,

developmental level and death environment

Kastenbaum’s Trajectories Kastenbaum’s Trajectories of Deathof Death

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National Mortality Followback Survey: 1993

Data on 23,000 records of death in 1993. All states except South Dakota

Causes of DeathCauses of Death

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Grief, Bereavement, and Grief, Bereavement, and MourningMourning

Adjusting to the Death of a Loved One Bereavement: state in which a person has

been deprived of a relative or friend by death

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Grief: keen mental anguish and sorrow over the death of a loved one

Mourning: socially established manner of displaying signs of sorrow over death

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Support groups to help people through grief work

Culture and Grief Work– Cultural variability in expressing grief

Expressing Anguished FeelingsExpressing Anguished Feelings

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Survivor vulnerable to physical and mental illness and death

Adjusting to Violent and Premature Death– Most severe grief reaction

Consequences of GriefConsequences of Grief

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Stages of bereavement for healthy adults who have lost a parent

1. Going back to the origins

2. Reevaluation phase

3. Assuming leadership

Adjusting to the Death of a Adjusting to the Death of a ParentParent

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1. Shock, numbness, denial, disbelief

2. Pining, yearning, and depression

3. Emancipation from loved one and adjustment to new circumstances

4. Identity reconstruction

Phases in the Bereavement Phases in the Bereavement ProcessProcess

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People handle grief differently Widows and Widowers

– Death rate for widowers higher– Difficulty expressing emotion

Individual VariationsIndividual Variations

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Three types (Lopata)1. Better educated, middle class, strongly identifying with role of wife

2. Women who led multidimensional lives; husband only one part of total set of relations

3. Lower-or working-class women in sex-segregated worlds immersed in kin, neighboring or friendship relationships with other women

Types of WidowsTypes of Widows

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Loss by Miscarriage– Sometimes receive no recognition of loss– Support Groups

Loss by Murder or Violence Bereavement process can go on indefinitely

Death of a ChildDeath of a Child