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Chapter Overview
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  • Attitudes toward death are expressed in the mass media and through language, music, literature, visual arts, and humor.
  • From pioneering efforts in the 1950s and 1960s, education about dying, death, and bereavement has achieved widespread acceptance.
  • Thanatology—the study of death—is composed of multiple dimensions and strives to create movement toward knowledge and actions that allow us to deal with death intelligently and with compassion.
  • Death anxiety and the related concepts of fear, threat, terror, and concern with the prospect of one's own death encompasses practical issues that human beings experience in their encounters with dying, death, and bereavement.
  • Our ancestors experienced death more frequently, and more often firsthand, than we do today. The reasons for this include changes in life expectancy and mortality rates, the causes of death, geographical mobility, displacement of death from the home to the hospital and other institutional settings, and advances in life-sustaining medical technologies.
  • Although many people no longer consider death and dying as taboo topics, society sometimes manifests features of death avoidance that hinder open discussion and acceptance.
  • The interrelated disciplines of death education, counseling, and care of the dying continue to evolve; one of the most pressing needs involves a deeper recognition of the diversity of experiences present in cosmopolitan, pluralistic societies.







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