
Contents
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Death and Dying: The Next Phase Death and Dying: The Next Phase
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Conclusion Conclusion
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References References
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11 The Smell of Chlorine: Coming to Terms with Death
Get accessStuart J. Youngner is the Susan E. Watson Professor of Bioethics and Chair of the Department of Bioethics at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. He has written and spoken extensively about definitions of death, organ and tissue transplantation, end‐of‐life decisions, and clinical ethics consultation.
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Published:07 July 2016
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Abstract
After trying to come to terms with death in the late 1960s and early 1970s, American medicine and the society it served largely abandoned the effort. Instead, both became preoccupied with a less existentially threatening task—controlling the timing of death by using or not using an array of high-tech interventions. The author shares some of his personal biography and the cultural context of his own professional development to illuminate some of the difficulties inherent in the efforts of health professionals to help dying patients and their families. He suggests that our society, with its emphasis on “scientific” knowledge, self-realization, and personal freedom, may have projected a new, less intimidating symbol upon which to focus its inescapable fear of death: the chance to control a prolonged and isolated dying in the hands of strangers and attached to machines amid the uncomfortable mix of medical uncertainty and vanishing hope.
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