Communicating Care at the End of Life  Paid

by Carey Candrian (Author)
©2015, Monographs, XII, 144 Pages
Media & Communication

Series: Health Communication, Volume 11

HARDCOVER

eBook


While health care at the end of life is changing, the language for talking about treatment options and patient preferences around the end of life is taking longer to change. This book carefully details the way language shapes decisions around end-of-life care. Using ethnographic research from two sites that offer emergency care and end-of-life care – a hospice and an emergency department – the author illustrates common themes around language use that serve as microcosms of the larger healthcare system in the United States. The sites have different purposes for providing care, yet the themes from both serve as guidance and reflection for other areas of caregiving.
The language used to talk about death holds consequences and opportunities for understanding and making decisions about care practices. This book uses personal stories and perspectives from patients, family members, and medical workers to paint a picture of some of the issues and tensions individuals and caregivers face. With an aging population – one that represents a major public health challenge in the twenty-first century – Carey Candrian argues that examining the care we provide for individuals, especially aging individuals, is fundamental to creating a developed, ethical, and engaged society.
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Series Editor’s Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
    • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Dying in the 21st Century
    • The Changing Landscape Concerning End of Life
    • Attitudes Toward Death and Dying
  • Chapter 2. The Cost of Understanding
  • Chapter 3. The Many Ways We Use Language
    • The History of Emergency Medicine
    • The History of Hospice Care
  • Chapter 4. Some Theories for Making Sense of Communication and Dying
    • An Interpersonal Approach
    • A Social Construction Approach
    • A Critical Cultural Approach
    • A Multi-Method Approach
    • Discursive Opening and Closing
  • Chapter 5. The Complexity of Death at Hospice
    • Transforming Work Practices
    • A Different Ethics of Care
    • Taming Death
  • Chapter 6. The Messiness of Death in the Emergency Department
    • Transforming Work Practices
    • A Different Quality of Care
    • Taming Death
  • Chapter 7. The Concealing and Revealing Nature of Language
    • Consequences of Talk at Hospice
    • Discursive Closure at the End of Life
  • Chapter 8. Conclusions, Implications, and Reflections
    • Adding to Our Health Care Understanding
    • More Useful Ways of Thinking and Talking
    • Practical Contributions
    • Closing
  • References
  • Index
Pages:
XII, 144
Year:
2015
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781433127144 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781454194385 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781453914038 (Active)
ISBN (MOBI):
9781454194378 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2015. 144 pp.
Carey Candrian (PhD, University of Colorado) is an assistant professor at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Her work has appeared in An Integrated Approach to Communication Theory and Research (2009), Journal of Internal Medicine, Human Relations, Health Communication, and Sage Cases in Methodology.

You do not have access to the Supplementary.

Similar titles