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The Collaborative for Palliative Care ("Collaborative") is a
grassroots consortium of public and private organizations that came
together in 2005 for the purposes of studying the increasing need
for palliative care and the methods for such care. It has grown
from a small fledgling group to a membership of over 50
community-based organizations and volunteers dedicated to improving
care of the seriously ill through education, research and advocacy.
The Collaborative bridges policy, research and practice in its
initiatives and vision for the future. Partners in Palliative Care
examines specific areas of concern that the Collaborative has
addressed in its education programs and advocacy, as well as the
collaborative processes that have been so successful in building
community assets. Areas of concentration have been diverse and
include advance care planning, relational communication paradigms,
community capacity building, the role of culture and spirituality
in palliative care, the meaning of pain and suffering for seriously
ill individuals, and the ethics of health care costs in palliative
and end-of-life systems of care. This book was originally published
as a special issue of the Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and
Palliative Care.
With more people living longer lives, there is increased importance
in the health care industry on improving services for the elderly.
This comprehensive book gives an expert overview of the topics and
challenges, along with imperative ethical and legal frameworks. The
book also details existing programs and benefits in relation to a
realistic portrayal of population needs. Other important issues are
covered such as long-term palliative care and hospice, other
vulnerable populations, elder abuse, public-private collaboration,
evidence-based policy-making, and much more.
With more people living longer lives, there is increased importance
in the health care industry on improving services for the elderly.
This comprehensive book gives an expert overview of the topics and
challenges, along with imperative ethical and legal frameworks. The
book also details existing programs and benefits in relation to a
realistic portrayal of population needs. Other important issues are
covered such as long-term palliative care and hospice, other
vulnerable populations, elder abuse, public-private collaboration,
evidence-based policy-making, and much more.
In Suffering Narratives of Older Adults, Mary Beth Quaranta
Morrissey turns to the traditions of phenomenology, humanistic
psychology and social work to provide an in-depth exploration of
the deep structure of the suffering experience. She draws upon the
notion of maternal holding to develop an original construct of
maternal affordances - the ground of possibility for human
development, agency and relational practices. The conceptual
analysis is based on the life narratives of several elders
receiving chronic care in facility environments. Creating new
fields of communication for patients, their family members and
health professionals in processes of reflection and shared decision
making, this book builds on knowledge about suffering to help guide
ethical action in preventing and relieving chronic pain and
improving systems of care. It offers a phenomenological approach to
understanding the maternal as a primary domain of moral experience
in serious illness and suffering, and implications for policy,
practice and research. A series of applied chapters, looking at
individual experiences of suffering and care experiences, present
critical areas of ethical inquiry, including: pain and suffering
maternal relational ethics evaluation and moral deliberation about
care options decision-making and moral agency end-of-life
experiences of care. Exploring how an ecological relational
perspective grounded in phenomenology may provide fruitful
alternatives to traditional frameworks in bioethics, this is an
important contribution to the ongoing development of an ecological
ethic of care. It will be of interest to scholars and students of
bioethics and phenomenological methods in the health and human
services, as well as practitioners in the field.
In Suffering Narratives of Older Adults, Mary Beth Quaranta
Morrissey turns to the traditions of phenomenology, humanistic
psychology and social work to provide an in-depth exploration of
the deep structure of the suffering experience. She draws upon the
notion of maternal holding to develop an original construct of
maternal affordances - the ground of possibility for human
development, agency and relational practices. The conceptual
analysis is based on the life narratives of several elders
receiving chronic care in facility environments. Creating new
fields of communication for patients, their family members and
health professionals in processes of reflection and shared decision
making, this book builds on knowledge about suffering to help guide
ethical action in preventing and relieving chronic pain and
improving systems of care. It offers a phenomenological approach to
understanding the maternal as a primary domain of moral experience
in serious illness and suffering, and implications for policy,
practice and research. A series of applied chapters, looking at
individual experiences of suffering and care experiences, present
critical areas of ethical inquiry, including: pain and suffering
maternal relational ethics evaluation and moral deliberation about
care options decision-making and moral agency end-of-life
experiences of care. Exploring how an ecological relational
perspective grounded in phenomenology may provide fruitful
alternatives to traditional frameworks in bioethics, this is an
important contribution to the ongoing development of an ecological
ethic of care. It will be of interest to scholars and students of
bioethics and phenomenological methods in the health and human
services, as well as practitioners in the field.
The Collaborative for Palliative Care ("Collaborative") is a
grassroots consortium of public and private organizations that came
together in 2005 for the purposes of studying the increasing need
for palliative care and the methods for such care. It has grown
from a small fledgling group to a membership of over 50
community-based organizations and volunteers dedicated to improving
care of the seriously ill through education, research and advocacy.
The Collaborative bridges policy, research and practice in its
initiatives and vision for the future. Partners in Palliative Care
examines specific areas of concern that the Collaborative has
addressed in its education programs and advocacy, as well as the
collaborative processes that have been so successful in building
community assets. Areas of concentration have been diverse and
include advance care planning, relational communication paradigms,
community capacity building, the role of culture and spirituality
in palliative care, the meaning of pain and suffering for seriously
ill individuals, and the ethics of health care costs in palliative
and end-of-life systems of care. This book was originally published
as a special issue of the Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and
Palliative Care.
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