9/4/2023 0 Comments In her own hands download![]() ![]() ![]() QUESTIONS – WHERE DO I WANT TO BE WHEN I AM DYING? In some countries it is considered to be a good death, as opposed to a ‘bad death’ in a hospital. However, in Developing Nations, this is not a question as most everyone does die at home. This has become even more critical in the COVID Pandemic. It is well known that most people in Developed Nations, around 80%, want to die in their own home. The nature of compassion is that it flows onward into the wider community. The program creates a people focused on the preciousness of life, loving care, compassion and provides for a good death. Their Dying at Home program has already enabled many to do that caring. The vision of Helen-Anne and Gerard is that carers worldwide be able to care for their loved at home. In 2016 Maria Dias a Timorese national, Helen-Anne, Gerard, Kathleen and David Dansie (IT), and Anthony Mannion (visual media), trained 216 leaders in East Timor from Dili to remote rural villages to spread across many districts in the entire country. In that same year, Helen-Anne taught in Wuxi China. Ray Arthur, taught the Dying At Home program in Chin State, Myanmar. They have spread the program widely in Australia and during two visits in 20, Gerard, Helen-Anne and Kathleen Dansie, spread the model to Limpopo District, South Africa for people dying of HIV/AIDS. Since 1980, Gerard and Helen-Anne have been fully engaged in the work of DYING AT HOME, a community initiative providing the carer of a dying loved one the education together with the coordination of friends and neighbours that will enable that person to remain at home to die there in the loving care of family. ![]() Helen-Anne is actively engaged as a consultant in Palliative Care. Helen-Anne’s work with the Dying At Home Program, has received awards including those from the Australian Medical Association (Best Individual Contribution to Health Care in Australia, 2000), NSW Council of the Professions for outstanding professional service, The Rotary International Centennial Community Award and others. She was made a foundation fellow in the Australasian Chapter of Palliative Medicine, (2000). In 1997 Helen-Anne undertook specialist training in Palliative Medicine through the University of Wales, UK. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |