Death Cafés are helping to remove the taboo associated with talking about death. Sharan Watson considers how these local initiatives are providing opportunities for honest conversations and placing talking about dying, death and bereavement firmly on the national agendaN/
Openness about death and dying hasbeen seen as beneficial for dyingpatients and their families ever ...
There is a genersl perception hweld by hospice and palliative care practioners taht society is reluc...
There seems to be is a general perception that the British public, which includes health care practi...
Background: A death café is an event where people drink, eat and discuss death. Death cafés do not f...
Background; Death Cafés are increasingly being held to facilitate discussions around death and dying...
Death cafés – the concept sounds ghoulish, but they could soon become as much a reality in South Afr...
Although around half a million people die in England each year, most deaths occur away from their ho...
The author reflects on palliative care in relation to community nurses and their support for patient...
The death-positive movement, the latest enactment of the death awareness movement, posits that conte...
How many of us are touched by the death of a loved one, friend or colleague? How many of us feel abl...
Attempts are being made at Death Cafe, a place to casually talk about death. As a result of consider...
New demographic and epidemiological trends mean people are dying at older ages and over long periods...
Openness about death and dying has been seen as beneficial for dying patients and their families eve...
Abstract Background Post-war Japanese tend to avoid discussion of death, resulting in a lack of deat...
The article examines whether death is still a taboo subject in palliative care. Evidence shows that ...
Openness about death and dying hasbeen seen as beneficial for dyingpatients and their families ever ...
There is a genersl perception hweld by hospice and palliative care practioners taht society is reluc...
There seems to be is a general perception that the British public, which includes health care practi...
Background: A death café is an event where people drink, eat and discuss death. Death cafés do not f...
Background; Death Cafés are increasingly being held to facilitate discussions around death and dying...
Death cafés – the concept sounds ghoulish, but they could soon become as much a reality in South Afr...
Although around half a million people die in England each year, most deaths occur away from their ho...
The author reflects on palliative care in relation to community nurses and their support for patient...
The death-positive movement, the latest enactment of the death awareness movement, posits that conte...
How many of us are touched by the death of a loved one, friend or colleague? How many of us feel abl...
Attempts are being made at Death Cafe, a place to casually talk about death. As a result of consider...
New demographic and epidemiological trends mean people are dying at older ages and over long periods...
Openness about death and dying has been seen as beneficial for dying patients and their families eve...
Abstract Background Post-war Japanese tend to avoid discussion of death, resulting in a lack of deat...
The article examines whether death is still a taboo subject in palliative care. Evidence shows that ...
Openness about death and dying hasbeen seen as beneficial for dyingpatients and their families ever ...
There is a genersl perception hweld by hospice and palliative care practioners taht society is reluc...
There seems to be is a general perception that the British public, which includes health care practi...