Reflections On Palliative Care
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On the other hand numbers of challenges still exist. Much service development has been unplanned and unregulated. Palliative care providers must continue to adapt to changing patterns of commissioning and funding services. The voluntary hospice movement may feel its values threatened by a new professionalism and policies which require its greater integration within mainstream services. There are concerns about the re-medicalization of palliative care, about how an evidence-based approach to practice can be developed, and about the extent to which its methods are transferring across diseases and settings.
Beyond these preoccupations lie wider societal issues about the organization of death and dying in late modern culture. To what extent have notions of death as a contemporary taboo been superseded? How can we characterize the nature of suffering? What factors are involved in the debate surrounding end of life care ethics and euthanasia?
David Clark and Jane Seymour, drawing on a wide range of sources, as well as their own empirical studies, offer a set of reflections on the development of palliative care and its place within a wider social context. Their book will be essential reading to any practitioner, policy maker, teacher or student involved in palliative care or concerned about death, dying and life-limiting illness.
Part one: Death in society
The social meaning of death and suffering
Living and dying
Ageing,
dying and grieving
The ethics of dying
Summary and critique
Part two: The philosophy and practice
of palliative care
History and development
Definitions, components and meanings
Routinization and
medicalization
Part three: Policy issues
Policy development and palliative care
The
delivery of palliative care services
Part four: Conclusions
The future for palliative care
References
Index.