Questions? Call 888-624-8373

PAPERBACK + PDF
your price: $100.00
add to cart

PAPERBACK
list:$85.25
Web:$76.73
add to cart

PDF BOOK
your price: $65.50
add to cart

PDF CHAPTERS
your price: $4.50
select

Rights & Permissions

topleft topright

Approaching Death: Improving Care at the End of Life (1997)
Institute of Medicine (IOM)

Page
337
bottomleft bottomright

The following HTML text is provided to enhance online readability. Many aspects of typography translate only awkwardly to HTML. Please use the page image as the authoritative form to ensure accuracy.


Georgetown University St. Francis Center

The School-Based Mourning Group Project: A New Approach to Assisting Bereaved Inner-City Youth

Contact:

Janice L. Krupnick, Ph.D.

The Georgetown University School of Medicine

Department of Psychiatry

3800 Reservoir Road, NW

Washington, DC 20007

202-687-1496

The aim of this program is to further develop, evaluate, and disseminate new service delivery programs involving therapies and techniques for further expression of pain and loss for bereaved school-age children in low-income, inner-city public schools who have experienced the death of a parent/parents due to violence, substance abuse, and, increasingly, HIV infection and AIDS.

The George Washington University Center to Improve Care of the Dying

Contact:

Joanne Lynn, M.D., Director

1001 22nd Street, NW, Suite 820

Washington, DC 20037

202-467-2222

www.gwu.edu/˜cicd

The Center to Improve Care of the Dying is an interdisciplinary organization engaging in research, advocacy, and education to improve the care of dying patients and those suffering with severely disabling diseases. Center staff encourage the development and realignment of health care funding to engender effective care. The center continues to address spiritual issues and the development of measures of quality of end-of-life services in health care. It was founded on the belief that life under the shadow of death can be rewarding, comfortable, and meaningful for almost all persons—but achieving that goal requires real change in the care system.

For the American Geriatric Society, CICD prepared an amicus brief for U.S. Supreme Court hearings on physician assisted suicide. The brief opposed constitutional recognition of a right to such assistance. The center has also described dying and decisionmaking in seriously ill adults, developed measurement tools for assessing quality of care and to foster development of accountability in care services, and carried out a project to evaluate the treatment of the dying process in medical textbooks.

CICD staff are developing a proposal called MediCaring. This project

Page
337