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Credit.Sean Hogan
By BJ Miller
Dr. Miller is a hospice and palliative medicine physician, author of “A Beginner’s Guide to the End: Practical Advice for Living Life and Facing Death,” and founder of Mettle Health, which provides consultations for patients and caregivers navigating serious illness.
Dec. 18, 2020
This year has awakened us to the fact that we die. We’ve always known it to be true in a technical sense, but a pandemic demands that we internalize this understanding. It’s one thing to acknowledge the deaths of others, and another to accept our own. It’s not just emotionally taxing; it is difficult even to conceive. To do this means to imagine it, reckon with it and, most important, personalize it.
DECCAN CHRONICLE.
Updated Dec 18, 2020, 1:30 am IST
There are only five organ donations per million population in Telangana state
Experts believe that awareness is the key apart from dealing with the technical and legal issues that come to the fore.
Hyderabad: The fear that they will be embroiled in medico-legal cases while dealing with organ donations is one of the constraints in getting more doctors and hospitals involved in Jeevandan, the government’s programme of organ donations.
While large corporate hospitals are enrolled in the programme, small hospitals and institutions shy away due to possible legal and technical issues.
Dr Swaranlatha, incharge of Jeevandan, the cadaver transplant programme of the government, said, “Within the medical fraternity, the fear of legal issues is perhaps one of the reasons restraining many from getting involved actively in the programme of organ donation. An overarching law to protect doctors for action taken in good faith, si
Opinion | How the Coronavirus Changed Death - The New York Times nytimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nytimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The mother of a British backpacker who vanished in Canada 31 years ago has made a fresh appeal for information on a new podcast highlighting missing persons cold cases.
Charles Horvath-Allan, then aged 20, was last seen in May 1989 at a campsite in Kelowna, British Columbia, where he had been staying while doing odd jobs in the tourist town.
He last contacted his mother Denise around the same time when he sent a fax home to Sowerby Bride, West Yorkshire, to co-ordinate travel plans for a trip to Hong Kong they were planning to take together.
When local police failed to help in the search for her son, Denise took it upon herself to travel to Canada and launch her own investigation.