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Title: CONTEXTUALIZING DEATH


1
CONTEXTUALIZING DEATH
  • Sonya Merrill, MD, PhD
  • Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas
  • January 27, 2004

2
OUTLINE
  • DEATH IN THE CONTEXT OF
  • Two Ancient Cultures
  • Four Major World Religions
  • Modern Medicine
  • Society Nationality, Ethnicity and Class
  • The Individual

3
Ancient Cultures
  • Egypt
  • Mesopotamia

4
ANCIENT EGYPT General Principles
  • Preoccupation with life and desire to continue
    living after death
  • Belief that Afterlife would resemble but improve
    upon earthly life
  • Importance of continuing bodily existence (e.g.,
    mummification, attempts to recover bodies, fear
    of being eaten by animals)
  • Ideal life span 100 years

5
ANCIENT EGYPTThe Soul
  • Ba the soul which animates the body, usually
    represented as a bird flying away at the time of
    death
  • Akh the spirit which also survives death and
    which can be good or evil, equipped with spells
    that would be useful after death
  • Ka difficult to conceptualize but often
    represented by a persons image or statue and
    thought to be a protecting genius after death
  • Suyt a persons shadow

6
ANCIENT EGYPTThe Body and its Preservation
  • Mummification removal of the decay-prone viscera
    enabling preservation of the majority of the body
    parts process lasting 30-200 days
  • Step 1 Removal of entrails through left-sided
    thoracic incision and storage in canopic jars
    bearing images of the sons of the god, Horus
  • Liver (human son, Imesty)
  • Lungs (ape son, Hapy)
  • Stomach (jackal son, Duamutef)
  • Intestines (hawk son, Qebekhsenuef)

7
ANCIENT EGYPTThe Body and Its Preservation
  • Step 2 Removal of other organs
  • Heart seat of intelligence so after removal
    was wrapped in linen and replaced/sewn into chest
    cavity
  • Brain not always removed as not deemed very
    important when removed, long hooked rods
    inserted into nostrils to snag tissue
  • Step 3 Application of the natron, a natural
    desiccant
  • Step 4 Complete drainage of all bodily fluids
  • Step 5 Careful wrapping of the body in hundreds
    of yards of linen

8
ANCIENT EGYPTThe Body and Its Burial
  • The Opening of the Mouth ceremony eyes, ears,
    nostrils and mouth touched to symbolize opening
    and persons revival
  • Tombs contained biographical information to
    preserve occupants name, reputation varied
    according to importance of deceased
  • VIP burial arrangements
  • Old Kingdom wooden coffin inside stone
    sarcophagus
  • Middle Kingdom human-shaped wooden coffin with
    mask over mummys head inside stone sarcophagus
  • New Kingdom elaborately painted anthropoid
    nested coffins, e.g., Tutankhamuns 3 nested
    coffins

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11
ANCIENT EGYPTAfterlife The Rough Guide
  • How to get there
  • Funerary texts provided deceased with all
    necessary information to navigate the afterlife
  • By boat sailing on day-night journey with the
    Sun God
  • attainable using basic spells which were left in
    guidebooks near the body
  • Where to go when you arrive
  • Field of Offerings land in the western horizon
    where deceased would work in lush fields and
    orchards to produce offerings for the god Osiris
  • Paradise deceased reaps the fruits of his own
    labor and enjoys a blissful existence

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ANCIENT EGYPT Afterlife The Rough Guide
  • What to pack
  • Premise deceased require basic provisions to
    survive in the afterlife
  • Initially, basic provisions such as bread, beer,
    meat, wine, linens were placed in tomb
  • Later, models of provisions were deposited to
    guarantee that supplies would last
  • Who to bring with you
  • Models of servants responsible for provisions
    were included so that they could continue to
    produce necessary supplies forever

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15
ANCIENT EGYPTConclusions
  • Optimistic belief that all bodily and spiritual
    aspects of person survived in afterlife
  • Great effort to ensure that deceased not only
    survived but thrived in afterlife
  • Mummification
  • Opening of the Mouth ceremony
  • Elaborate burials with provisions
  • Guide books to the afterlife
  • Spells to ensure deceaseds safety

16
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAGeneral Principles
  • Death is inevitable when the gods created men,
    they set aside death for mankind and kept eternal
    life in their own hands
  • Use of euphemisms speaking of death summoned it,
    so to die was to cross the Khubur, to go up
    to heaven, to go to ones fate, to be invited
    by ones gods, to come to land on ones
    mountain, to go on the road of ones
    forefathers
  • A gradual process rather than an instantaneous
    end of earthly existence
  • The individual corpse
  • The individual ancestor dependent on descendents
    offerings
  • After several generations, collective ancestral
    spirits
  • Finally, annihilation of individual and recycling
    into new soul

17
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAThe Soul
  • Etemmu ghost closely associated with physical
    remains
  • Napistu life force or breath of life
  • Zaqiqu birdlike spirit able to fly and slip
    through small spaces, associated with dreaming as
    it could leave body when person was asleep
    closest to modern equivalent of soul
  • Both etemmu and zaqiqu descended with the body to
    the netherworld at death if the body had been
    destroyed, then etemmu was also destroyed leaving
    only shadowy zaqiqu which was deemed harmless

18
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAThe Body and Its Burial
  • Preparation of body ceremonial washing, tying
    the mouth shut, perfuming, dressing in clean
    clothes
  • Public viewing before the funeral
  • Burial in the ground in a coffin, sarcophagus or
    tomb
  • Elite buried in vaults below their house or
    palace while others buried in public cemeteries
  • Last rite a burnt offering, which in the case of
    the king consisted of burning his throne, table,
    weapon and scepter

19
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAFuneral Customs
  • Mourning rituals could last up to 7 days
  • Family and close friends were expected to
    participate in the case of the death of royalty,
    the entire population had to mourn
  • Professional mourners sometimes employed
  • Funeral laments expressed mourners grief and
    eulogized the deceased
  • Physical displays of grief wearing plain
    clothes, tearing clothes, wearing sackcloth, not
    bathing or grooming, fasting

20
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA Afterlife The Rough Guide
  • How to pack
  • take as many personal items as you can afford
  • Travel provisions for the journey food and
    sandals (or a chariot, if you were wealthy)
  • Things you might need when you arrive food,
    weapons, toiletries, jewelry
  • Hostess gifts to placate the netherworld gods

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ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAAfterlife The Rough Guide
  • Where underground
  • Climate a rather dark, damp and dreary place
  • How to get there cross demon-infested lands,
    pass the Khubur River with the aid of its
    guardian god, gain entry through 7 gates to the
    city of the netherworld with its gatekeepers
    permission
  • Your hosts the royal couple, Nergal and
    Ereshkigal, and their court they welcome the
    dead, instruct them as to the local rules, and
    show them to their lodgings in the netherworld
    (which did not appear to be based on the
    deceaseds earthly behavior)

24
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIA Afterlife The Rough Guide
  • How to be happy there your happiness after death
    depended on the quality and quantity of offerings
    made to you by your relatives offerings had to
    be made continually to ensure continued success
    in the afterlife
  • How to have an awful time without offerings, or
    if your death had been violent or premature,
    youd be restless and your ghost would wander the
    earth attacking people
  • Multiple-entry visas the deceased generally
    received offerings from behind the gates of the
    netherworld but were allowed out (and back in)
    several times a year to visit relatives (e.g.,
    the month of Abu July/August)
  • Recycling policies eventually old souls were
    recycled into new human beings

25
ANCIENT MESOPOTAMIAConclusions
  • Some sort of ghostly existence after death which
    was accessed only via burial and mourning rituals
  • No bodily resurrection or judgment
  • The ideal death surrounded by family and friends
    while lying on the special funerary bed with a
    chair at ones left which served as the seat for
    the soul after its release from the body

26
Four Major World Religions
  • Judaism
  • Christianity
  • Islam
  • Hinduism

27
JUDAISMThe Origin of Death
  • God saw all that he had made, and it was very
    good Gen 1.31
  • The first humans disobey God Gen 3
  • Death introduced to the world as a consequence of
    human disobedience for dust you are and to
    dust you will return Gen 3.19
  • Being bene Adam (sons of Adam) makes all future
    people subject to the penalty of death
  • Thus death is an inevitable and feared event

28
JUDAISMWhat happens when we die?
  • Death occurs when rwh, the divine life-giving
    force, leaves the body rwh distinguishes the
    living from the dead

29
JUDAISMWhat happens after we die?
  • At death, the body returns to dust, and the
    breath which God breathed into it initially (rwh)
    returns to the air, or to God nothing can
    survive
  • God makes his covenant (promises) with the Jews
    regarding their future on earth (e.g., the
    continuity of the nation and of ones
    descendents), not with regard to an individuals
    survival after death
  • Thus death is acceptable only at the end of a
    long life when one has descendants who can
    preserve ones memory

30
JUDAISMWhat happens after we die?
  • Sheol as a metaphor for death
  • a ghostly, subterranean land of the dead
  • an inferior copy of life on earth
  • not necessarily hell (i.e., a place of torment),
    but certainly a place to avoid for as long as
    possible chiefly because it entails permanent
    separation from God even for the righteous

31
Sheol
  • The days of my life are few enough turn your
    eyes away, leave me a little joy, before I go to
    the place of no return, the land of murk and deep
    shadow, where dimness and disorder hold sway, and
    light itself is like the dead of night. Job
    10.18-22

32
JUDAISMWhat happens after we die?
  • The possibility of an afterlife
  • If God has been the Jews creator (in the past)
    and guardian (in the present), why not his
    sustainer (in the future)?
  • During the Babylonian exile, there was an
    emphasis on the future restoration of Israel to
    peace and prosperity by the Messiah
  • And if those Jews alive at this future time could
    be restored, why couldnt the faithful dead also
    experience a restoration to life (return of blood
    and breath)?
  • Hope of an individuals life after death became
    widespread by the Rabbinic period Maimonides
    said that anyone who doesnt believe in the
    resurrection of the dead is not a true Jew

33
JUDAISMWhat happens after we die?
  • O my God, the soul which you gave me is pure
    you created it, you formed it, you breathed it
    into me, you preserve it within me and you will
    take it from me. But you will restore it to me in
    the hereafter. Authorized Daily Prayer Book p. 5

34
JUDAISMWhat happens after we die?
  • Transmigration
  • According to the Kabbalah, souls can go from one
    body to another (gilgul, or transmigration)
    those deserving punishment or those who are
    extremely righteous

35
JUDAISMHow is death observed?
  • Be present at the time of death/departure of the
    soul
  • Recite at least the last part of the Shema at the
    moment of death
  • Accompany the body to the grave
  • Funeral lamentations in the presence of the
    corpse
  • Burial of the corpse (and in ancient times,
    preservation of the bones in an ossuary)
  • Shivah week-long period of mourning in ancient
    times sprinkling of ashes, rolling on the ground,
    tearing clothes, dressing in sackcloth in modern
    times, forsaking ones everyday work and routine
  • Kaddish to be said at the Yahrzeit (first
    anniversary of death)

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CHRISTIANITYThe Origin of Death
  • Shared with Judaism (and later with Islam)
  • Original sin of the first humans brought the
    penalty of death not only to Adam and Eve but to
    all people

38
CHRISTIANITYThe most important death
  • The crucifixion of Jesus
  • a common means of execution of criminals in the
    Roman Empire
  • the soldiers took charge of Jesus. Carrying his
    own cross, he went out to the place of the Skull
    (which in Aramaic is called Golgotha). Here they
    crucified him. John 19.16-18

39
CHRISTIANITYbecause it ends all Death
  • Centrality of the death and resurrection of Jesus
  • Based on peoples eye-witness accounts of his
    death and resurrection as well as on his
    teachings, the Christian doctrine of resurrection
    was formulated
  • For as by man came death, by a man has come also
    the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all
    die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive.
    I Cor 15.21-22
  • our Savior Jesus Christ ...destroyed death and
    has brought life and immortality 2 Tim 1.10
  • Death is swallowed up in victory O Death, where
    is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?
    Hosea 13.14/1 Cor 15.54-55

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CHRISTIANITYWhat happens after we die?
  • The Afterlife
  • Destination determined by the individuals
    acceptance or rejection of the salvific death and
    resurrection of Jesus
  • Heaven
  • Eternal life for the believer in a perfected
    body
  • Life in the continual presence of God
  • Absence of death, pain, grief, war, conflict
  • Metaphors of streets of gold, etc.
  • Hell
  • Separation from God
  • Limited period (annihilationism) or eternal
    punishment
  • Metaphors of lakes of fire and brimstone

42
CHRISTIANITYHow is death observed?
  • During life through the Sacraments
  • Baptism we were buried with him Christ
    through baptism into death in order that, just as
    Christ was raised from the dead through the glory
    of the Father, we too may live a new life on
    earth and in the afterlife. Rom 6.4
  • Eucharist whenever you eat this bread and drink
    this cup, you proclaim the Lords death until he
    comes. 1 Cor 11.26

43
CHRISTIANITYHow is death observed?
  • At and after death
  • Last rites into thy hands, Merciful Savior, we
    commend the soul of thy servant, now departed
    from the body receive him into the arms of thy
    mercyThe Book of Common Prayer
  • Christian burial
  • Requiem mass
  • Prayers for the dead

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ISLAMThe origin and purpose of death
  • The origin of death as in Judaism and
    Christianity
  • the original sin of Adam and Eve, and the
    punishment In the earth you will live, and in
    it you will die Quran 7.24
  • The will of God
  • It is not possible for a soul to die except with
    the permission of God at a term set down on
    record. Quran 3.139
  • A time of trial
  • Life is a time of probation and decision while
    alive, individuals are free to direct their lives
    along the straight path back to God (sirat
    ulMustaqim) or to reject God Quran 1.5

47
ISLAMWhat happens when we die?
  • Human beings are body and spirit separated, then
    reunited
  • Bashar flesh, the body
  • Ruh Gods breath or soul with which he infuses
    the bashar and which continues to live apart from
    the body after death until its reunion with the
    body on the Day of Resurrection
  • Nafs the spiritual vitality linking body and
    soul, which escapes at the time of death (and
    also departs the body at night in sleep and
    returns in the morning) Quran 6.60f

48
ISLAMWhat happens after we die?
  • The angel of death gathers those who are due to
    die Quran 32.10/9-11
  • The body is buried and decays
  • The soul escapes the body and may either be
    raised into an interim body or be in a suspended
    state
  • The body and soul are reunited on the Day of
    Resurrection (yaum ulQiyama) we will raise him
    up on the day of resurrectionQuran 20.125
  • The appearance before God on the Day of Judgment
    (yaum udDin)

49
ISLAMJudgment and the Afterlife
  • Day of Judgment on the Day of Resurrection we
    will bring out a written record each man will
    see it spread open Quran 17.14
  • No one can redeem or atone for the misdeeds
    of another (contra Christianity)
  • The Garden of Reward for the ones who turn to
    God during life (eternal pleasure)
  • The Fire of Jahannam for those who reject God
    during life (eternal burning with fire)

50
ISLAMHow is death observed?
  • Washing and burying the body within 8 hours of
    death
  • Respect for the body (because it will be restored
    on the Day of Resurrection)
  • Prayers over the dead (the four takbirs
    proclamations of Gods greatness)
  • Recitation of the whole Quran if possible
  • Mourning should not be excessive, as this would
    disturb the dead as well as show lack of
    acceptance of Gods will and purpose regarding
    death

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HINDUISMTraversing a continuum
  • Hinduism is the map of how to live
    appropriately in order to move towards (and
    perhaps attain) the goal.
  • J Bowker, The Meanings of Death.
    Cambridge CUP, p. 131.

53
HINDUISMThe soul is eternal
  • Souls are eternal and do not die with the body
    as Krishna said,
  • Those who are truly wise do not mourn for the
    dead any more than they do for the living. Just
    as embodied selves pass through childhood, youth
    and old age in their bodies, so too there is a
    passing at death to another body. Bhagavad
    Gita 2.12
  • To attain this condition of wisdom about the
    souls eternality is to attain brahman

54
HINDUISMThe goal is to free the self
  • Brahman/nirvana the freed self who has attained
    a state of wisdom regarding the eternality of the
    soul
  • A state of power experienced both in this life
    and after death
  • Liberation achieved by renouncing all desired
    objects and not experiencing any cravings for
    them, absence of preoccupation with the bodily
    self Gita 2.71f
  • The state of happiness and peace from being
    eternally with Krishna (and yet distinct from
    him)

55
HINDUISMThe cycle of death and rebirth
  • The self is unchanged, yet reborn repeatedly
    until it finds it way to liberation using the
    Gita and other scriptures as a guide
  • Samsara the cycle of rebirth which continues
    until brahman/nirvana is reached
  • Karma actions and their consequences bad karma
    can only be overcome by achieving moksha, or the
    release that comes when one realizes that one
    cannot influence the process of karma
  • Kashi dying in the right city is a shortcut to
    moksha

56
HINDUISMDeath is not that important
  • During samsara death will occur many times thus
    it is of little importance
  • One death is merely a stage, a milestone, in a
    long process
  • The continuing self has already passed on when a
    person dies (or is cremated)
  • if one is good, the soul leaves through the
    brahmarandhra (a small opening in the crown of
    the head) if one is evil, through the anus

57
HINDUISMThe afterlife before reentering samsara
  • Preta an intermediate condition taken by the
    soul immediately after death
  • Judgment and the afterlife
  • Early literature the domain of Yama, the ruler
    of the ancestors a place where families are
    reunited and the pain and sorrow of this life is
    removed
  • Later and post-Vedic literature vivid
    descriptions of hell-like places of torture and
    punishment (narakas), where the punishment fits
    the crime

58
HINDUISMHow is death observed?
  • Meditation on God at the time of death
  • the soul can influence what form it will take
    next
  • aided by namakirtana, or chanting the name of a
    god until one ceases to be aware of anything else
  • Ritual return of the dead on the funeral pyre
  • the eye to the sun, the breath (atman) to the
    wind, the body to the plants Rg Veda 10.16.3
  • Ekoddista ritual to render benign the deceased
    individuals preta
  • Sraddha 16-stage ritual taking up to a year and
    including not only one deceased individual but
    also up to 4 generations of ancestors
  • to construct an interim body for the preta

59
Modern Medicine
  • How Doctors took the Place of Priests at the
    Deathbed

60
The Medicalization of Death
  • In ancient times, the doctors presence at the
    deathbed was rare this was the priests role
  • When involved at all, the doctors role was
    merely to predict the time of death (so the
    priest could do his job)
  • After the Enlightenment, it became a status
    symbol to die under medical care, as medicine
    was seen to be able to do battle with death
  • Dissection enabled improved understanding of
    pathophysiology of death
  • Diseases were being described and categorized
  • New vision of natural death was thus available
    death at the end of a long life as the result of
    a clinically identifiable illness
  • Death may even be prevented (or at least delayed)
    by understanding disease
  • C Seale. Constructing Death. Cambridge CUP,
    1998, pp. 76-78.

61
Religion, Medicine and Death
  • modern rationality, of which medicine is an
    example, is itself a religious orientation,
    providing an imagined community, rites of
    inclusion and membership, and guidance for a
    meaningful death.
  • Seale. Constructing Death. Cambridge CUP,
    1998, pp. 75-76.

62
Death as Biological Imperative
  • Cells are preprogrammed to stop dividing after a
    certain number of divisions, and then to die
    (apoptosis)
  • DNA errors accumulate over time and with
    continued environmental exposures
  • Cumulative effects of cell death impair organ
    functions needed to sustain life
  • Teleologically, death may be adaptive at
    population level people dont compete with their
    offspring for scarce resources
  • Searle. Constructing Death. Cambridge
    CUP, 1998, pp. 35-36.

63
Medical Definitions of DeathCardiopulmonary Death
  • Previously easily diagnosed by irreversible
    cessation of respiration and circulation which
    necessarily led to death of all organs within a
    short time
  • After advent of ventilators, death could not be
    equated with absence of vital signs of
    circulation and respiration since machines can
    fulfill these functions
  • If this definition of death was used, organ
    harvesting for transplants would be jeopardized
    by deterioration of the organs during the time
    immediately after cessation of respiration and
    circulation
  • Currently accepted in the USA as one of two valid
    definitions of death
  • A Scholthauer and B Liang, Definitions and
    implications of death. Hematology/oncology
    Clinics of North America 166 (2002).

64
Medical Definitions of DeathWhole-Brain Death
  • 1968 Harvard Medical School committee defines
    death as irreversible coma a state of
    unreceptivity and unresponsivity, with no
    movement, breathing, or reflexes, accompanied by
    a flat EEG
  • 1970 Kansas is first state to legally recognize
    the absence of spontaneous brain function as
    equivalent to cardiopulmonary death
  • 1980 Uniform Determination of Death Act declares
    that an individual who has sustained either (1)
    irreversible cessation of circulatory and
    respiratory functions, or (2) irreversible
    cessation of all functions of the entire brain,
    including the brain stem, is dead

65
Medical Definitions of DeathWhole-Brain Death
  • This definition means that healthy organs can be
    harvested as artificial ventilation and
    respiration are maintained
  • It also implies that once a diagnosis of
    whole-brain death is made, further medical
    treatment is futile this has financial
    implications medical insurance generally will
    not cover that is not medically necessary,
    leaving families and hospitals with the bill for
    further treatment
  • USA, Germany, Japan, and France all accept this
    definition of death

66
Medical Definitions of DeathHigher-Brain Death
  • Applicable to PVS patients those without brain
    functions that control emotion, cognition and
    consciousness but who maintain at least partial
    brain stem function
  • In general, courts are reluctant to adopt this
    definition because the absence of higher,
    cortical brain activity is harder to prove with
    certainty, at least in the short term
  • However, some courts have allowed
    life-sustaining treatment of PVS patients to be
    discontinued (e.g., Quinlan, Cruzan, Schiavo?)

67
Modern Medical Death Rites
  • Life insurance to ameliorate the consequences of
    ones death, to gain greater control over death
  • Wills to determine what happens to ones
    possessions after death
  • Death certificates to enshrine in law the cause
    of death
  • Autopsies to identify the cause of death if not
    obvious
  • Inquests to identify the cause of death if
    suspected to be unnatural
  • Burial of the body (/- embalming) OR cremation
    and interment of ashes to confine the deceased
    to a known resting place which can also serve
    as a memorial

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Death in Society Doctors and Patients
  • Nationality
  • Ethnicity
  • Class

72
DOCTORSDifferences in End-of-life Care
  • Death in ICU preceded by decision to limit care
  • Belgium 65
  • Canada 70
  • USA 75
  • Israel 91
  • Decisions to withhold versus withdraw care (in a
    survey of western European physicians)
  • 93 sometimes withheld treatment
  • 77 sometimes withdrew treatment
  • Physicians with strong religious beliefs (and
    those from countries with deeper religious roots
    such as Greece, Italy and Portugal) were less
    likely to withdraw life support
  • Withdrawal of nutrition is considered acceptable
    in PVS patients
  • USA 89
  • Britain 65
  • Belgium 56
  • Japan 17
  • J-L Vincent, Cultural differences in end-of-life
    care. Critical Care Medicine 292 (2001).

73
PATIENTSDifferences in End-of-Life Decisions
  • Nationality
  • Canadian patients more likely to want the details
    of their terminal illness than patients in Europe
    or South America
  • J-L Vincent, Cultural differences in end-of-life
    care. Critical Care Medicine. 292 (2001).

74
PATIENTSDifferences in End-of-Life Decisions
  • Ethnicity
  • Cultures which are more individualistic, secular,
    pragmatic, scientific tend to prefer full open
    awareness (as opposed to cultures which are
    familial, sacred, traditional, emotional)
  • In favor of closed awareness Mexican, Japanese
  • In favor of full open awareness Anglos
  • Most interested in carrying out wishes of the
    dying Japanese
  • Most wills and life insurance Anglos
  • C Seale. Constructing Death. Cambridge CUP,
    1998, pp. 179-181.

75
PATIENTSDifferences in End-of-Life Decisions
  • Ethnicity
  • In USA, whites significantly more likely than
    blacks
  • to discuss treatment preferences before death
  • to complete a living will
  • to designate Durable Medical Power of Attorney
  • to limit care in certain situations and withhold
    treatment before death
  • S Hopp and S Duffy, Racial variations in
    end-of-life care. Journal of the American
    Geriatrics Society 486 (2000).

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PATIENTSDifferences in End-of-Life Decisions
  • Class
  • Persons of higher socioeconomic class 2.7 times
    more likely to desire full open awareness of a
    terminal diagnosis
  • C Seale. Constructing Death. Cambridge CUP,
    1998, p. 179

77
The Individual
  • My Death

78
I Will Die
  • What is required to understand the notion, I
    will die? To bridge the gap between what Ive
    experienced of life to a construct of its
    negation?
  • Self-awareness
  • Logical thought
  • Conceptions of
  • Probability
  • Necessity
  • Causation
  • Time
  • Finality
  • Separation
  • R Kastenbaum. The Psychology of Death. New York
    Springer, 2000, pp. 30-35.

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Death and Psychological Development
  • Developmental Stages
  • Up to age 5
  • Death is not final
  • Death is a diminution of aliveness
  • Death involves separation
  • Ages 5-9
  • Death is final
  • Death is not inevitable if one is clever and
    lucky
  • Death personification death as a separate
    person
  • Age 10 and older
  • Death is final
  • Death is inevitable
  • Death is universal
  • Nagy, in R Kastenbaum. The Psychology of Death.
    New York Springer, 2000, pp. 51-53.

81
Stages of Dying
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression
  • Acceptance
  • E Kubler-Ross, in R Kastenbaum. The Psychology of
    Death. New York Springer, 2000, pp. 216-217.

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83
Getting the Timing Right
  • The material end of the body is only roughly
    congruent with the end of the social self. In
    extreme old age, or in disease, when mind and
    personality disintegrate, social death may
    precede biological death. Ghosts, memories and
    ancestor worship are examples of the opposite a
    social presence outlasting the body.
  • Euthanasia social death is preempted by actively
    hastening biological death
  • Hospice social death is pushed back as far as
    possible until biological death occurs
  • C Seale. Constructing Death. Cambridge CUP,
    1998, pp. 34, 184.
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