End-Of-Life Stories: Crossing Disciplinary BoundariesDonald E. Gelfand, PhD, Richard Raspa, PhD, Sherylyn H. Briller, PhD, Stephanie Myers Schim, PhD, RN, APRN, CNAA, BC Springer Publishing Company, 2. 5. 2005. - 256 страница End-of-life experiences are often viewed in terms of only one perspective such as medicine. In this volume, a variety of end-of life experiences are presented and each case is analyzed from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. These range across a broad array of the helping professions, and disciplines such as information, law and the social sciences. The book provides a variety of narratives about end-of-life experiences contributed by members of the Wayne State University End-of-Life Interdisciplinary Project. Each of the narratives is then analyzed from several different disciplinary perspectives. These analyzes illustrate how specific end-of-life narratives can be viewed from different dimensions and helps students, researchers and practitioners see the important and varied meanings that end-of-life experiences have at the level of the individual, the family, and the community. The narratives include end-of-life experiences of individuals from a number of diverse backgrounds. |
Садржај
1 | |
26 | |
40 | |
An Ojibwa Journey | 51 |
Gifts and Givers | 64 |
Living and Dying Well | 77 |
Family Dynamite | 92 |
Defining a Person | 105 |
Surviving EndofLife Care | 134 |
Family Choices and Challenges | 148 |
Trouble With God and Family | 156 |
Homeless and at Home | 168 |
Culture and Karma | 177 |
A Spectrum of Palliation | 189 |
16 Boundaries and Bridges | 209 |
Tattoos and Tolerance | 120 |