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Showing posts with label Detroit Hospice Volunteer Book Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Hospice Volunteer Book Review. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Hospice Volunteer Book Review: Meeting the Death Monster in Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes


In America, death is still a terminally ill taboo in great need of palliative-hospice care. Too many people avoid talking, hearing, writing, or reading about the end of life. As an author and consultant on hospice and eldercare, I have been told on several occasions that the topic is just too “depressing” or too “final.” Several months ago, this reluctance to deal with death visited a friendship. I had given a casual friend a copy of my book Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes. Not knowing her feelings about death, I decided not to talk to her about the book unless she brought it up. Recently, she did. I’ll call her Alice.

Alice works in the healthcare profession, so I was somewhat surprised to discover that she feels strongly that death, a frightening stalker of her dreams, is her enemy. She shared that death has stolen too many of her loved ones, including pets. She helplessly dreads the thought of losing even more. My own acceptance of death, which comes across clearly in my conversations and writings, seems inappropriate to her. She finds my views too accepting of her enemy, too casual a regard for life. While she says she would consider hospice care along with other options, she admits she could never be even an average hospice volunteer.


What is her feedback regarding my book? She loves the patients’ stories and my comments about interacting with various people in the nursing home world. The original poetry, which concludes each chapter and probably nudges her own poetic abilities, pleases her. She finds the discussions on caregiving, dementia, death rituals, and bereavement informative. The explanations about school-nursing home partnerships and the ideal nursing home described in the chapter “Baby Boomer Haven” are particularly enjoyable. But she dislikes emphatically the premise that there is a “right” way to die.


I am not sure if her hostility toward death has changed much, but I hope that this book meeting with what she refers to as “the monster” has impacted her positively on some level. Those of us who embrace the topic of death will continue to be viewed with dismay by those who deal with mortality through avoidance and resignation of themselves and loved ones as victims of death’s malicious powers.


Alice’s revelations reinforce the importance of promoting death as a natural part of life that should be experienced with dignity by everyone. One person at a time, I believe conversations and writings enhance lives of the naysayers by slowly empowering them with death acceptance, even as they resist the message. I appreciate Alice’s frankness in sharing death’s painful presence in her life and in giving feedback on my book. Most of all, I commend her willingness to become a ball of courage rolling into the high weeds where the death monster lives.


Frances Shani Parker, Author
Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes is available in paperback and e-book editions in America and other countries at online and offline booksellers.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

Final Exam Book Review By Detroit Hospice Volunteer

Dr. Pauline Chen, author of Final Exam: A Surgeon's Reflections on Mortality, is a doctor who "gets" it. She understands that doctors can only do their best, that they won’t save every patient and that, in the natural order of life, they have not failed when their patients die. She realizes that doctors are just like other people and that in our common humanity, we often share similar needs. Finally, she knows that death can be a difficult journey, but consoling words can be powerful rest stops along the way.

In Final Exam, Dr. Chen takes the reader through her evolution with perceptions of death and mortality. She discusses personal feelings regarding her first dissection of a human cadaver. Later, she assumes responsibility for the accidental death of a patient in her care. Ultimately, she concludes that the role of doctors with patients and their loved ones should include more of the emotional comfort that traditionally has been missing too often. She adds that medical schools should educate doctors more in these caregiving strategies.

This book has important implications for hospice care. If doctors embrace Dr. Chen’s way of thinking, they will replace their feelings of failure when patients can no longer be cured with feelings of commitment to non-curative hospice care. They will recommend these options to patients more readily and increase the number of patients receiving quality health care at the end of their lives. In other words, they will “get” it and be comfortable with that knowledge.


Frances Shani Parker, Author
Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes is available in paperback at many booksellers and in e-book form at Amazon and Barnes and Noble booksellers.