The person is dead. I believe his community culture was buried in the sacred place to prevent the community from suffering from several disasters. At this point, he was inconsistent with his community, leaving the rules at his will, he will be cremated, his ashes dotted in the sea. When the community discusses this issue, the body is waiting at the hospital. What will you do. The elders demand a moral perspective. What can I say? If the belief that this person must be buried is a person rooted in the community's mind, the decision to cremor him will cause a disturbance.
The latest three books tell the story of contemporary death culture. They are targeting different audiences, but when they think together, they deepen our awareness of the current death culture and opportunity for transformation. This review article explores the direction of healthcare systems for those who die with the lenses provided by these books: Final Action: Death, Death, and editing by Nan Bauer-Maglin and Donna Perry, our Selected Helen Stanton Chapple's Rescue Ideology, Hospice Care and Hospice Care by Stephen R. Connor. Each book identifies a particular aspect of a healthcare system that contributes to cultures that deny and resist death.
The place without death provides a very excellent critical analysis of the current dead hospital medical culture. Helen Stanton Chapple conducted an ethnographic survey on preliminary surveys at two hospitals, Catholic Community Hospital and Education Hospital, and the hospital where she was hired. She interviewed clinicians in various fields and 211 patients died. She looks unwavering persuasive discussion of the harsh reality of hospital death and the need to change the culture of death of this country.
This short story was first published in 1845. This is the story of a dying man. Hypnotist placed a man in hypnotism just before his death. He studied the concept of a person who died of tuberculosis in order to understand his condition. The man was hypnotized for seven months. The dying man (Waldemar) is awaking his tongue as he is awake or is allowed to die. During hypnotism he was pale, cold, and without pulse. When hypnotist finally raised him, Valdemar's voice cried and died! die! When he got out of his condition, his body quickly rotted into a rotten rotten liquid substance. As everyone knows, Slope is a thorough study of medical examination and postmortem exam, so it is possible to combine pictures of words to portray fear and blood.