Transcript Document
Towards a Good Death
Creating a compassionate community
Professor Edwin Pugh
Keith Aungiers
Death and Dying is:
• a normal part of life
• more than a medical responsibility
• a Public Health and Societal Issue
• a responsibility of a ‘compassionate community’
Features of a compassionate community
• acknowledges end of life care as responsibility of wider
community and organisations ….not just NHS
• involves end of life care in local government policy and
planning
• offers people wide variety of supportive experiences,
interactions and communication
• has strong commitment to social and cultural difference
What is a Good Death?
A new vision for the north east
“The North East will have the highest quality services
to support individuals (along with their families and
carers) in their choices as they approach death.
By a good death we mean one which is free of pain,
with family and friends nearby, with dignity and in the
place of one’s choosing.”
Place and Preferences of the Public
• Place (Middlesbrough)
• Preferences
• 61%
• 21%
• 13%
• 3%
• 15%
• 60%
• 0%
• 15%
hospital
home
care home
hospice
The Challenge
• cultural shift in attitudes/behaviour takes years
• need to create a society where:
death is accepted as a ‘normal’ part of life
life goes on and has meaning and value even when person dying
society and individuals recognise responsibility to be
compassionate to needs of those who are dying and their loved
ones
policies and practice of all organisations sympathetic to needs of
dying people
Better Health, Fairer Health ‘pledge’
• “We will create a charter for end of life care, with a
statement of the rights and entitlements that should be
honoured both for the individual preparing for death,
and for their carers and families. This should relate not
only to medical and nursing care but to the behaviours
of all agencies and sectors who deal with these
issues.”
Key to Success
• support by the public
• support by NHS, LAs, VCS
• ownership and backing by all agencies
• fit with NHS Constitution
Key elements of the charter
• Respect
• Time to plan
• Care
• Support
“Paradoxically the charter is not principally about
dying - it is about living with dying and indeed
ensuring we live to the fullest of our potential with
meaning and value in whatever time we have.”
Examples of Action So Far
• Equity and Diversity
• Solicitors
• Gateshead Council
• Housing and Environment
• Home Group: Social Housing
Provider
• Human Resource policies
• Middlesbrough Council
• NHS Organisations
• The Faith Community
• Teesside Interfaith Group
• Orthodox Jewish Community
• Churches regional commission
Compassionate Communities Unit
“It is neither desirable nor cost effective to see death as
the province of clinical medicine. The new unit will
implement the charter for A Good Death, stress the
need to ‘normalise’ death, build public health capacity
and aim to create a compassionate community
approach to end of life.”
.
I feel a
Complete
wally
That Pugh
is a wally
I wish I
was dead
‘How people die remains in the memory of those who live on’
Dame Cicely Saunders, Founder of the Hospice Movement