Over the last decade, policies in both the UK and many other countries have promoted the opportunity for patients at the end of life to be able to choose where to die. Central to this is the expectation that in most instances people would prefer to die at home, where they are more likely to feel most comfortable and less medicalised. In so doing, recording the preferred place of death and reducing the number of hospital deaths have become common measures of the overall quality of end of life care. We argue that as a consequence, what constitutes a desired or appropriate place is routinely defined in a very simple and static 'geographical' way, that is linked to conceptualising death as an unambiguous and discrete event that happens at a pre...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end‐of‐life care, while in‐patient hospit...
Public Health England (2013) survey data indicates that while the place of death is geographically u...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that the number of deaths worldwide will increase from...
Over the last decade, policies in both the UK and many other countries have promoted the opportunity...
Background: Palliative care policy and professionals are concerned about the location of care, epito...
© 2018 Dr. Katrin GerberAdvances in healthcare, treatment and technology have profoundly altered the...
“Home” is not just a physical compound. It is our natural habitat where meaningful and intimate time...
© 2016 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness. Home is frequently idealised as the preferr...
The place of death of cancer patients has become an important theme in UK cancer and palliative care...
My research uses a psychosocial approach to reach a deeper understanding of the experience of those...
Hospitals remain the most common location of death in a significant number of countries, and special...
Background: Over the past ten years there has been an increasing focus on the need for improving the...
Objectives To explore whether advance care planning is associated with place of death in England, as...
Place of death is now a quality marker of end of life care. Decisions around place of death are comp...
Background: International palliative care policy often views home as the most desirable location fo...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end‐of‐life care, while in‐patient hospit...
Public Health England (2013) survey data indicates that while the place of death is geographically u...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that the number of deaths worldwide will increase from...
Over the last decade, policies in both the UK and many other countries have promoted the opportunity...
Background: Palliative care policy and professionals are concerned about the location of care, epito...
© 2018 Dr. Katrin GerberAdvances in healthcare, treatment and technology have profoundly altered the...
“Home” is not just a physical compound. It is our natural habitat where meaningful and intimate time...
© 2016 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness. Home is frequently idealised as the preferr...
The place of death of cancer patients has become an important theme in UK cancer and palliative care...
My research uses a psychosocial approach to reach a deeper understanding of the experience of those...
Hospitals remain the most common location of death in a significant number of countries, and special...
Background: Over the past ten years there has been an increasing focus on the need for improving the...
Objectives To explore whether advance care planning is associated with place of death in England, as...
Place of death is now a quality marker of end of life care. Decisions around place of death are comp...
Background: International palliative care policy often views home as the most desirable location fo...
Home is frequently idealised as the preferred location for end‐of‐life care, while in‐patient hospit...
Public Health England (2013) survey data indicates that while the place of death is geographically u...
The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that the number of deaths worldwide will increase from...