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Death, dying, loss, and care giving are not just medical issues,
but societal ones. Palliative care has become increasingly
professionalised, focused around symptom science. With this
emphasis on minimizing the harms of physical, psychological, and
spiritual stress, there has been a loss of how cultures and
communities look after their dying, with the wider social
experience of death often sidelined in the professionalisation and
medicalisation of care. However, the people we know and love in the
places we know and love make up what matters most for those
undergoing the experiences of death, loss, and care giving. Over
the last 25 years the theory, practice, research evidence base, and
clinical applications have developed, generating widespread
adoption of the principles of public health approaches to
palliative care. The essential principles of prevention, harm
reduction, early intervention, and health and wellbeing promotion
can be applied to the universal experience of end of life,
irrespective of disease or diagnosis. Compassionate communities
have become a routine part of the strategy and service development
in palliative care, both within the UK and internationally. The
Oxford Textbook of Public Health Palliative Care provides a
reframing of palliative care, bringing together the full scope of
theory, practice, and evidence into one volume. Written by
international leaders in the field, it provides the first truly
comprehensive and authoritative textbook on the subject that will
help to further inform developments in this growing specialty.
'A wonderful book' - Dr. Rangan Chatterjee 'Highly convincing' -
Daily Express 'Pioneering' - The Telegraph 'The strength of the
book lies in its description of how community life can have a
transformative effect on individuals' - British Journal of General
Practice Across the country, general hospital admissions are on the
rise. But in a small town in rural England, thanks to the simple
introduction of kindness and compassion, that trend has been
reversed. And what this town achieved, we can all adopt in our own
lives to powerful effect. Through daily mindful acts of care we are
capable of changing things for the better, both inside ourselves
and for the world around us. Frome in Somerset isn't special. It
could be any town; it could be your town. And yet the people who
live there have a story to tell about the simple, ground-shaking
power of compassion. If it came in tablet form, it would be hailed
as a wonder of modern medicine. By contrast, it's entirely free but
offers heartening evidence that when human beings make time for
each other, the beneficial effects go far beyond the reach of naive
optimism. 'A culture in which compassion is a prevailing value
allows individuals to flourish and bring their talents and gifts to
the communities in which they live. Unanticipated possibilities
emerge, presenting fresh ways of addressing what previously
appeared to be insoluble problems. Hearts are lifted. The case for
hope is more strongly made. And as the people who work in this way
begin to change the world immediately around them, so too, the
wider world beyond begins to change.' Dr Julian Abel & Lindsay
Clarke
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