Culture, Traditions and Being Remembered
There are as many end of life rituals as their are cultures. Each intended to ease through the dying process and to help those left behind to move on, while celebrating a life lived, and honouring memories.
For some memories are triggered by a treasured momento: a piece of jewellery, a hand-knitted blanket. For many, it’s photographs, special occasion cards, scrapbooks. For some, it’s a project worked on together for a shared experience to remember: creating a puzzle together or – using available technology – iphone video conversation. Virtual experiences offer more options: a Facebook memorial page, a shared photo library.
Pew Research Center:Views on End-of-Life Medical Treatments
Staying Alive: what more of us want to do “The share of the public that says doctors and nurses should do everything possible to save a patient’s life has gone up 9 percentage points since 2005 and 16 points since 1990. From Pew Research Center forum “Views on End...
Organ and Tissue Donation: a learning experience
Donna Renzetti (left, standing) Vice President, Corporate Services and Chief Financial Officer at West Park Healthcare Centre came in on a Saturday to make sure there were plenty of chairs at the ready for the Trillium Gift of Life Network (TGLN) presentation on organ...
Gaps in End of Life information: a layman’s point of view
With Mary Ito, host of FreshAir: celebrating after our interview on CBC Radio about what this 'layman' brings to conversations about end of life Click to listen: 11 minutes
Obituaries and those who write them
I'm noticing new approaches to obituaries Defying a history of somber and factual, I'm seeing welcomed injections of humour - including obits written by the deceased. Before, of course. This means leaving blanks as you can see from above picture. Walter George Bruhl...