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A Public Health Perspective on End of Life Care

A Public Health Perspective on End of Life Care

The Fragile Brain The Strange, Hopeful Science of Dementia

The Fragile Brain The Strange, Hopeful Science of Dementia

Death, Dying, and Social Differences

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9780199599295
 

Society has become increasingly diverse; multi-cultural, multi-faith and wide ranging in family structures. The wealthier are healthier and social inequalities are more pronounced. Respecting and working with the range of 'differences' among service users, families and communities in health and social care with ill, dying and bereaved people is a neglected area in the literature. As the principles of palliative and end of life care increasingly permeate the mainstream of health and social care services, it is important that professionals are sensitive and respond to the differing needs of individuals from diverse socio-economic backgrounds, ethnicities, beliefs, abilities and sexual orientations, as well as to the different contexts and social environments in which people live and die.

This book explores what underpins inequality, disadvantage and injustice in access to good end of life care. Increasingly clinicians, policy planners, and academics are concerned about inequity in service provision. Internationally, there is an increasing focus and sense of urgency both on delivering good care in all settings regardless of diagnosis, and on better meeting the needs of vulnerable and disadvantaged groups.

National initiatives emphasise the importance of resolving disparities in care and harnessing empowered user voices to drive change. This newly expanded, fully revised second edition, with 11 new chapters, provides a comprehensive analysis of discrimination, difference and disadvantage in end of life care, and offers practical guidance for all who seek to support the equitable provision of good end of life care.

More Information
Author OLIVIERE
Table Of Content

Foreword, Lukas Radbruch, President of the EAPC
Part One
1: Social differences - the challenge for palliative care, Barbara Monroe, David Oliviere, and Sheila Payne
2: The emergence of new forms of dying in contemporary societies, Glennys Howarth
3: Social inequality in dying, Barbara Hanratty and Louise Holmes
4: Place and space: geographic perspectives on death and dying, Anthony C. Gatrell and Sheila Payne
5: Communication, information and support, May McCreaddie
6: Poverty and finance, Malcolm Payne
7: Embracing diversity at the end of life, Heather Richardson and Jonathan Koffman
8: Disability and the death and dying agenda, Carol Thomas
Part Two
9: Death and dying in older people, Caroline Nicholson and Jo Hockley
10: Vulnerable adults and families, Malcolm Payne
11: Dying as a teenager or young person, Anne Grinyer
12: People with intellectual disabilities, Irene Tuffrey-Winje
13: Mental health needs, Max Henderson and Annabel Price
14: People with dementia, Murna Downs
15: Homeless people, Louise Jones
16: Travellers' death and dying, Regina McQuillan
17: Asylum seekers and refugees, Nigel G. J. Dodds
18: Palliative care for substance abusers, Chris Farnham
19: Family carers and social difference, Kelli I. Stajduhar
20: Sexual orientation, Katherine Cox
21: Palliative care for prisoners, Mary Turner and Sheila Payne
22: Bereavement - a world of difference, Orla Keegan
Afterword, Mike Richards

Publish Date 29 Sep 2011
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