BMJ 2003;327:174-175 (26 July), doi:10.1136/bmj.327.7408.174
Editorial
Patient centred death
We need better, more innovative research on patients' views on
dying
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
A good death has always been important in all cultures. To achieve your
chosen afterlife you died either well (euthanatos) or nobly (kalosthanein).
But what is a good death in a world that for many is post-religious and
medicalised? We know something from research on patients and their
familiesbut not nearly enough. We need much better research that uses
innovative and different methods.
We don't have good data on how people die (as opposed to what they die of),
but there is a strong impression that many die
badly.1 People do
not die in the places they wish or with the peace they desire. Probably too
many die alone, in pain, terrified, mentally unaware, without dignity, or
feeling alienated. People who are poor, from ethnic minorities, or
marginalised may have even worse deaths.
Modern dying involves a struggle for control. Some doctors fear failure
when they cannot keep their patients . . . [Full text of this article]
Jocalyn Clark, editorial registrar
BMJ
(jclark@bmj.com)

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