OYENTE

Kat Nolan

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Excellent overview with a very human touch

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 06-17-24

I am an experienced nurse and for the past 7 years have worked in hospice and palliative care in home, hospital, and inpatient hospice settings. I am intimately familiar with the benefits and limitations of hospice and palliative care. I feel the author did exceptionally well in her research, explanations, and storytelling to explain the process, legal options and hurdles, and the complicated social and cultural issues around medically assisted death. Death, autonomy, and grief and difficult to assist individuals and families through. Delving into the deeply rooted cultural reasons for our discomfort with death and the lack of understanding, by both lay persons and medical professionals, shines a light on our failings as a society. Even if you do not agree with the idea of assisted death, everyone dies and acknowledging that, allowing yourself to prepare for death, process and accept grief, and that death can be both natural and acceptable can really help everyone find peace during a very difficult time. I appreciated the final push by the author towards societal shifts that reframes dying so that we can stop treating it as an unacceptable outcome. At a certain point, it is the only outcome. And allowing for a good death, no matter how that looks, will provide much greater sense of wellbeing for those left behind.

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