Dying alone is hard anywhere in the world

T. Amir,, R. Yantzi,, S. de Laat,, C. Bernard, L. Elit, C. Schuster-Wallace, L. Redwood-Campbell, M. Hunt, L. Schwartz
04
June
2020
Output type
Report
Location
No items found.
Focus areas
No items found.
Topics
No items found.

McMaster University’s study aimed to investigate the provision of palliative care in humanitarian response, including the ethical dimensions for health care providers and the experiences of affected individuals and caregivers.

This report presents key perspectives of those engaged in humanitarian healthcare first-hand, and clarifies how humanitarian organisations and healthcare providers might best support ethically and contextually-appropriate palliative care in a range of humanitarian crises.

Other resources

explore all resources
Baseline Evaluation Report: Advancing the evidence base of the minimum initial service package (MISP) for reproductive health: using a quality improvement approach in the DRC
Barriers to seeking post-abortion care in Paktika Province, Afghanistan
Too much to mask: determinants of sustained adherence to COVID-19 preventive measures among older Syrian refugees in Lebanon
No items found.
No items found.
Global
No items found.
No items found.