End-of-life care requires good planning
If vacations, weddings, babies and football games are important enough to require planning, why don’t we plan for sickness, frailty and dying?
Charles Lewis: HereöÏÓãÊÓƵapp one way we can care for our sick
The grim truth is that legalized euthanasia is not going away. This is not giving up but stating a hard truth.
B.C. hospices fight assisted suicide plan
SURREY, B.C. – Assisted suicide was legalized just over a year ago, but the debate is far from over.
Speaking out: The real dignity of dying
This past fall, my mother received a call from the care home in Yorkton, Sask., where her eldest sister was a resident. My mother was informed that her sister had taken a turn in health and there likely wasn’t much time left.
Rather than fighting to change the system which imposes euthanasia, health care professional bioethicist Bob Parke wants to create a private hospice that bans assisted killing and where dying will only come the natural way.
Show us the money
If there is an issue that unites most politicians, health workers, social agencies and religious leaders, it is the urgent need for a bold strategy and major investment in palliative and hospice care.