Senior living: More people are caring for dying loved ones at home. This nonprofit is shows them how
Liz Dunnebacke isn’t dying, but for a recent end-of-life care workshop in New Orleans, she pretended to be. Dunnebacke lay still atop a folding table that was dressed as a bed, complaining that her ...
Physicians in the U.S. are only marginally more likely to die at home or in hospice than other Americans, according to study results.“There have been considerable public health efforts aimed at ...
In this cross-sectional study, physicians were slightly more likely to die at home or in hospice than both the general ...
One overlooked question shapes every end-of-life care decision. Answer it early to reduce fear, prevent crisis, and protect your family from regret.
NEW YORK − When Susan Rahn dies, she wants a party. The 55-year-old grandmother from Webster, New York, has Stage 4 metastatic breast cancer. Rahn considers herself lucky for having lived far beyond ...
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