Expanded definitions of the "good death"? : race, ethnicity and medical aid in dying

Article indépendant

CAIN, Cindy L. | MCCLESKEY, Sara

The range of end-of-life options is expanding across North America. Specifically, medical aid in dying (AID), or the process by which a patient with a terminal illness may request medical assistance with hastening death, has recently become legal in eight jurisdictions in the United States and all of Canada. Debates about AID often rely on cultural constructions that define some deaths as 'good' and others as 'bad'. While research has found commonalities in how patients, family members and health care providers define good and bad deaths, these constructions likely vary across social groups. Because of this, the extent to which AID is seen as a route to the good death also likely varies across social groups. In this article, we analyse qualitative data from six focus groups (n = 39) across three racial and ethnic groups: African American, Latino and white Californians, just after a medical AID law was passed. We find that definitions of the 'good death' are nuanced within and between groups, suggesting that different groups evaluate medical AID in part through complex ideas about dying. These findings further conversations about racial and ethnic differences in choices about end-of-life options.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12903

Voir la revue «Sociology of health and illness»

Autres numéros de la revue «Sociology of health and illness»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Expanded definitions of the "good death"? : r...

Article | CAIN, Cindy L. | Sociology of health and illness

The range of end-of-life options is expanding across North America. Specifically, medical aid in dying (AID), or the process by which a patient with a terminal illness may request medical assistance with hastening death, has recen...

Expanded definitions of the "good death"? : r...

Article indépendant | CAIN, Cindy L. | Sociology of health and illness

The range of end-of-life options is expanding across North America. Specifically, medical aid in dying (AID), or the process by which a patient with a terminal illness may request medical assistance with hastening death, has recen...

Improving end-of-life care for diverse popula...

Article indépendant | MCCLESKEY, Sara G. | The American journal of hospice and palliative care | n°6 | vol.36

BACKGROUND: While disparities in end-of-life care have been well-documented, explanations for the persistence of disparities are less clear. This study sought to examine diverse perceptions of end-of-life care, especially regardin...

De la même série

How companions speak on patients' behalf with...

Article indépendant | PINO, Marco | Sociology of health and illness | n°2 | vol.44

Companions are individuals who support patients and attend health-care appointments with them. Several studies characterised companions' participation in broad terms, glossing over the details of how they time and design their act...

The many faces of medical treatment imperativ...

Article indépendant | SPENCER, Karen Lutfey | Sociology of health and illness | n°4-5 | vol.44

Despite changes in specific features of the US health-care system and policy environment in the past 50 years, professional dominance of medicine remains consistent. Extant social science research has considered how the cultural a...

Expanded definitions of the "good death"? : r...

Article indépendant | CAIN, Cindy L. | Sociology of health and illness

The range of end-of-life options is expanding across North America. Specifically, medical aid in dying (AID), or the process by which a patient with a terminal illness may request medical assistance with hastening death, has recen...

"My life's properly beginning" : young people...

Article indépendant | TURNER, Nicola | Sociology of health and illness

This paper explores how young people who are living with a parent who is dying talk about the future. Drawing on a qualitative, interview study, I argue that young people are able to move imaginatively beyond the death of a parent...

Performing care : emotion work and ‘dignity w...

Article indépendant | WILKINSON, Samantha | Sociology of health and illness

In this paper we, twin sisters, present a joint autoethnographic account of providing end of life care for our mum who had terminal cancer. Using the theoretical framing of performance from Goffman's theory of Dramaturgy, we prese...

Chargement des enrichissements...