How long am I going to live? Who will be with me when I die? Will my family forgive me? Will I have pain?—are among the 31 vital end-of-life questions patients and their families ask. This book is about navigating those last days, at the bedside, and saying farewell with hope, love, and compassion.
Dr. Edward Creagan provides the reassuring answers patients and families deserve. He has dedicated his life to death. For over forty winters at the Mayo Clinic he has been at the bedside with more than 40,000 patient encounters in the last stages of their lives on this earth. Held the hands of family members. Prayed with them. Listened.
This book addresses
•Making end-of-life decisions when Mom or Dad or a loved one can’t or won’t.
•Understanding what’s happening in the mind of someone facing their last days, hours, minutes, and moments.
•How to come to grips with our own mortality, maybe putting plans in place, living life differently after having held the hand of a loved one who is actively dying.
•Ways to give hope where none seemed possible.
•Death from a medical perspective, and much more.
Format:
Kindle Edition
Pages:
275 pages
Publication:
Publisher:
Edition:
Language:
ISBN10:
0991654498
ISBN13:
9780991654499
kindle Asin:
B07H11PCQ2
Farewell: Vital End-of-Life Questions with Candid Answers from a Leading Palliative and Hospice Physician
How long am I going to live? Who will be with me when I die? Will my family forgive me? Will I have pain?—are among the 31 vital end-of-life questions patients and their families ask. This book is about navigating those last days, at the bedside, and saying farewell with hope, love, and compassion.
Dr. Edward Creagan provides the reassuring answers patients and families deserve. He has dedicated his life to death. For over forty winters at the Mayo Clinic he has been at the bedside with more than 40,000 patient encounters in the last stages of their lives on this earth. Held the hands of family members. Prayed with them. Listened.
This book addresses
•Making end-of-life decisions when Mom or Dad or a loved one can’t or won’t.
•Understanding what’s happening in the mind of someone facing their last days, hours, minutes, and moments.
•How to come to grips with our own mortality, maybe putting plans in place, living life differently after having held the hand of a loved one who is actively dying.