Palliative Care, Social Work and Service Users: Making Life PossibleJessica Kingsley Publishers, 15/11/2006 - 272 من الصفحات This unique book provides a rare look at social work and palliative care from the perspective of service users. It is the first to investigate specialist palliative care social work from this viewpoint. |
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... seen to have broader political, social and economic relations, as human beings have learned how to control natural forces and overcome disease and want. We can see this clearly when we compare mortality rates for HIV/AIDS in the West ...
... seen to pose questions about the quality of the life it sustains. These are being raised in relation to: • foetuses and babies who would formerly not have lived • disabled people (with both inherited and non-inherited impairments) • the ...
... seen big changes in these areas. But perhaps the most radical proposal to emerge in recent years has also been the most hesitant in its development. This is the call to equalize roles and relationships and redistribute power in health ...
... seen to affect anyone, regardless of class or status. This association helped lead to hospices being seen as a particularly deserving cause. The provision of specialist palliative care is still largely restricted to people with cancer ...
... seen as less interesting and attractive. In the 1970s social work experienced a renaissance, with the creation of 'social services departments', the emergence of 'radical social work' and a new commitment to community-based working and ...
المحتوى
39 | |
Developing the Discussion | 131 |
How We Carried Out the Research
| 227 |
The Interview Schedule
| 247 |
References
| 252 |
Subject Index
| 261 |
Author Index
| 266 |