Literature DB >> 1519095

Dying with dignity.

T N Madan1.   

Abstract

Death is a theme of central importance in all cultures, but the manner in which it is interpreted varies from society to society. Even so, traditional cultures, including Christian, Hindu and Jain religious traditions, exhibited a positive attitude to death and did not look upon it in a dualistic framework of good vs bad, or desirable vs undesirable. Nor was pessimism the dominant mood in their thinking about death itself. A fundamental paradigm shift occurred in the West in the eighteenth century when death was desacralized and transformed into a secular event amenable to human manipulation. From those early beginnings, dying and death have been thoroughly medicalized and brought under the purview of high technology in the twentieth century. Once death is seen as a problem for professional management, the hospital displaces the home, and specialists with different kinds and degrees of expertise take over from the family. Everyday speech and the religious idiom yield place to medical jargon. The subject (an ageing, sick or dying person) becomes the object of this make-believe yet real world. As the object of others' professional control, he or she loses the freedom of self-assessment, expression and choice. Or, he or she may be expected to choose when no longer able to do so. Thus, not only freedom but dignity also is lost, and lawyers join doctors in crisis manipulation and perpetuation. Although the modern medical culture has originated in the West, it has gradually spread to all parts of the world, subjugating other kinds of medical knowledge and other attitudes to dying and death.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Entities:  

Keywords:  Death and Euthanasia; Jainism

Mesh:

Year:  1992        PMID: 1519095     DOI: 10.1016/0277-9536(92)90335-n

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  4 in total

1.  Assessment of factors influencing preservation of dignity at life's end: creation and the cross-cultural validation of the preservation of dignity card-sort tool.

Authors:  Vyjeyanthi S Periyakoil; Arthur M Noda; Helena Chmura Kraemer
Journal:  J Palliat Med       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 2.947

2.  Meaning of death: an exploration of perception of elderly in a Bangladeshi village.

Authors:  Taufique Joarder; Alicia Cooper; Shahaduz Zaman
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2014-09

3.  Creation and the empirical validation of the dignity card-sort tool to assess factors influencing erosion of dignity at life's end.

Authors:  Vyjeyanthi S Periyakoil; Helena Chmura Kraemer; Arthur Noda
Journal:  J Palliat Med       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 2.947

4.  Perspective of patients, patients' families, and healthcare providers towards designing and delivering hospice care services in a middle income Country.

Authors:  Saber Azami-Aghdash; Morteza Ghojazadeh; Mir Hossein Aghaei; Mohammad Naghavi-Behzad; Zoleikha Asgarlo
Journal:  Indian J Palliat Care       Date:  2015 Sep-Dec
  4 in total

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