Dignity at the end of our days: personal, familial, and cultural location
- PMID: 15511035
Dignity at the end of our days: personal, familial, and cultural location
Abstract
The desire to be treated with dignity, particularly at the end of one's life, is a fairly universal preference found in most cultures. Such treatment requires positive actions of respect in the behaviour of others toward the dying and the dead. It also involves negative actions, particularly refraining from doing "dignatory harms" to the dead and the dying. Yet it is not always easy for clinicians and researchers who deal with the dying and dead to decide on appropriate action or inaction. I suggest that such decision making can be helped by locating the dying person along three dimensions: the personal, the familial, and the cultural. These elements are interrelated in complex ways that need to be unpacked in context. Thus, one person may locate herself within a familial context while a sibling may locate himself against that context. While locating individuals along the three dimensions suggested does not "solve" ethical problems, it should help clinicians in understanding and dealing more compassionately with the dead, the dying, their families, and their communities.
Comment in
-
Death with dignity: contested boundaries.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):201-6. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511040 Review. No abstract available.
-
Dignity, dialogue, and care.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):207-11. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511041 Review. No abstract available.
-
Reflections on the human dignity symposium: is dignity a useless concept?J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):212-6. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511042 Review. No abstract available.
Similar articles
-
Death, dignity, and moral nonsense.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):171-8. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511036 Review.
-
Living and dying with dignity: reflections on lived experience.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):193-200. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511039 Review.
-
Harms to dignity, bioethics, and the scope of biolaw.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):185-92. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511038 Review.
-
Lost in translation: dignity dialogues at the end of life.J Palliat Care. 2004 Autumn;20(3):150-4. J Palliat Care. 2004. PMID: 15511033 Review.
-
Granting death with dignity: patient, family and professional perspectives.Int J Palliat Nurs. 2007 Apr;13(4):170-4. doi: 10.12968/ijpn.2007.13.4.23487. Int J Palliat Nurs. 2007. PMID: 17551420 Review.
Cited by
-
Palliative care nursing interventions in Thailand.J Transcult Nurs. 2013 Oct;24(4):332-9. doi: 10.1177/1043659613493439. Epub 2013 Jul 8. J Transcult Nurs. 2013. PMID: 24014487 Free PMC article.
-
Dying with dignity according to Swedish medical students.Support Care Cancer. 2006 Apr;14(4):334-9. doi: 10.1007/s00520-005-0893-5. Epub 2005 Oct 18. Support Care Cancer. 2006. PMID: 16231123
-
Dignity and its influencing factors in patients with cancer in North China: a cross-sectional study.Curr Oncol. 2019 Apr;26(2):e188-e193. doi: 10.3747/co.26.4679. Epub 2019 Apr 1. Curr Oncol. 2019. PMID: 31043826 Free PMC article.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Medical