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Mortality
End-of-life Care
Virtual Themed Issue
Contents
HEYSE-MOORE, L. (1996). Spiritual pain in the dying. Mortality, 1, 297 – 315.
MCGRATH, P. (1998). Buddhist spirituality – a comparative perspective on hospice care.
Mortality, 3, 251 – 263.
MACLEOD, R. & CARTER, H. (1999). Health professionals’ perceptions of hope:
understanding its signi.cance in the care of people who are dying’. Mortality, 4, 309 – 317.
LLOYD, L. (2000). Dying in old age: promoting well-being at the end of life. Mortality, 5,
171 – 188.
CARROLL, B. (2001). A phenomenological exploration of the nature of spirituality and
spiritual care’. Mortality, 6, 81 – 98.
BLANK, R. (2001). Technology and death policy: redefining death. Technology and death
policy: rede.ning death’ (6: 191 – 202). Mortality, 6, 191 – 202.
DEIN, S. & GEORGE, B. (2001). The time to die: symbolic factors relating to the time of
death. Mortality, 6, 203 – 211.
DAVEY, B. (2002). Do not resuscitate decisions: too many, too few, too late? Mortality, 6,
247 – 264.
MASSON, J. (2002). Non-professional perceptions of ‘good death’: a study of the views of
hospice care patients and relatives of deceased hospice care patients. Mortality, 7, 191 – 209.
TURNER, L. (2002). Bioethics and end-of-life care in multi-ethnic settings: cultural diversity in Canada and the USA. Mortality, 7, 285 – 301.
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