Cicely Saunders, Founder of the Hospice Movement: Selected Letters, 1959-1999

Author(s) David Clark
Url
Publisher Oxford University Press
Year 2005
Description

Cicely Saunders is universally acclaimed as a pioneer of modern hospice care. Trained in nursing,social work, then medicine in 1958 and subsequently dedicated the whole of her professional life to improving the care of dying and bereaved people. Founding St Christopher's Hospice in London in 1967, she encouraged a radical new approach to end-of-life care combining attention to physical, social, emotional and spiritual problems, brilliantly captured in her concept of 'total pain'. Her ideas about clinical care, education and research have been hugely influential, leading to numerous prizes and awards in recognition of her humanitarian achievements. In this book the sociologist and historian David Clark presents a selection of her vast correspondence, together with his own commentary. The letters of Cicely Saunders tell a remarkable story of vision, determination and creativity. They should be read by anyone interested in how we die in the modern world.


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