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How to talk about death and dying


Photo: iStock
Our reluctance to think, talk or communicate about death is even more pronounced when we deal with others’ loss compared to our own, new research finds, but either way we tend to frame attitudes and emotions in a sad and negative way.
Teaching new more positive ways to address these difficult conversations is the focus of a new paper in PLOS ONE journal by palliative care specialists across Australia.
Led by Flinders University’s Research Centre for Palliative Care, Death and Dying (RePaDD) and Palliative and Supportive Services, researchers from Flinders, CQUniversity Australia, NT Palliative Care Central Australia and University of Technology Sydney, surveyed 1,491 people about the use of language to express their feelings and insights into death and dying. ....

Flinders University , South Australia , New South Wales , Lauren Miller Lewis , Jennifer Tieman , Repadd Centre , Flinders University Computer Scientist Dr Trent Lewis , Supportive Services , Flinders University Research Centre For Palliative Care , Australian Government Department Of Health , University Of Technology Sydney , Research Centre , Palliative Care , Care Central Australia , Technology Sydney , Professor Jennifer Tieman , Australian Government Department , Advance Care Planning , Australian Government , Department Of Health , Death And Dying , Health Services , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , புதியது தெற்கு வேல்ஸ் , லாரன் மில்லர் லெவிஸ் ,

Talking about death and dying


Talking about death and dying
A new online course breathes life into a taboo topic.
Credit: iStock
To encourage open conversation about the inevitable end of life, palliative care experts across Australia devised an online course to teach people more positive ways to talk about it, publishing their evaluation in the journal 
According to Lauren Miller-Lewis, a lecturer in positive psychology at Flinders University, and colleagues, this is increasingly important as the population ages. “Thus, planning for how we live and provide care at the end-of-life is becoming a major public health issue,” they write.
“Understanding contemporary community attitudes and feelings towards death is valuable because it may inform the development of future health services, improve patient and family care at the end-of-life, and it may also inform policy on ways to encourage conversations leading to greater death preparedness and planning.” ....

Flinders University , South Australia , Lauren Miller Lewis , Jennifer Tieman , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , லாரன் மில்லர் லெவிஸ் , ஜெனிபர் டைமன் ,

Talking about death in a positive way could improve end-of-life care


Altering the way we think about death, and teaching people to discuss it in a more positive way, could improve end-of-life health care for patients, scientists claim.
Flinders University researchers surveyed 1,491 people to determine what language they used to describe their feelings when it came to dying. 
For many people death is one of the most taboo topics, especially if someone has recently experienced loss and the words they use can show their comfort level. 
People who are not comfortable with the topic are more likely to choose emotional words such as fear or scary whereas others will use terms like inevitable or natural .  ....

Flinders University , South Australia , Trent Lewis , Lauren Miller Lewis , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , ட்ரெண்ட் லெவிஸ் , லாரன் மில்லர் லெவிஸ் ,

How to talk about death and dying


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IMAGE: A collection of the automated sentiment or emotional analysis of words commonly used to talk about death and dying of a loved one.
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Credit: Flinders University
Our reluctance to think, talk or communicate about death is even more pronounced when we deal with others loss compared to our own, new research finds, but either way we tend to frame attitudes and emotions in a sad and negative way.
Teaching new more positive ways to address these difficult conversations is the focus of a new paper in
PLOS ONE journal by palliative care specialists across Australia.
Led by Flinders University s Research Centre for Palliative Care, Death and Dying (RePaDD) and Palliative and Supportive Services, researchers from Flinders, CQUniversity Australia, NT Palliative Care Central Australia and University of Technology Sydney, surveyed 1,491 people about the use of language to express their feelings and insights into death and dying ....

Flinders University , South Australia , New South Wales , Lauren Miller Lewis , Jennifer Tieman , Repadd Centre , Flinders University Computer Scientist Dr Trent Lewis , Supportive Services , Flinders University Research Centre For Palliative Care , Australian Government Department Of Health , University Of Technology Sydney , Research Centre , Palliative Care , Care Central Australia , Technology Sydney , Professor Jennifer Tieman , Australian Government Department , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , தெற்கு ஆஸ்திரேலியா , புதியது தெற்கு வேல்ஸ் , லாரன் மில்லர் லெவிஸ் , ஜெனிபர் டைமன் , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் கணினி விஞ்ஞானி டாக்டர் ட்ரெண்ட் லெவிஸ் , ஆதரவு சேவைகள் , ஃப்லிஂடர்‌ஸ் பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆராய்ச்சி மையம் க்கு நோய்த்தடுப்பு பராமரிப்பு , ஆஸ்திரேலிய அரசு துறை ஆஃப் ஆரோக்கியம் ,