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Deathcare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Deathcare processes. Clockwise from upper left: Body laying in a mortuary, morgue slabs with preparation tools, headstones, and funeral procession.

Deathcare (also death care, death-care or after-deathcare) is the planning, provision, and improvement of post-death services, products, policy, and governance. Here, deathcare functions to describe the industry of deathcare workers, the policy and politics surrounding deathcare provision, and as an interdisciplinary field of academic study.[1]

Deathcare, from the point of clinical death, has a diverse timeline. The first point of care often involves immediate healthcare professionals and responders closest to the person who has died, including doctors, nurses, palliative and end-of-life care workers.[2] From here, the care of deceased individuals has a culturally, religious, and personal course. This can involve a range of people from religious figures, morticians, to grave keepers – all of these roles formulating to what can be known as deathcare workers.[3]

Etymology

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The word deathcare is a compound term from the words death and care. It can also take the form of death care,[4] however this is mostly used in the United States and Canada in the Anglosphere, where deathcare is a preferred variation elsewhere in the English speaking world reflecting on the preferred version of healthcare in places like the UK, Australia, India, etc.[5]

History

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The provision of deathcare has historically[6] and often continues to be a highly decentralized and diverse practice combining multiple actors and stages.[7][8] Nonetheless, trends in providers and purveyors of deathcare do exist throughout different eras: in the time prior to the American Civil War, for instance, the majority of care for the deceased was performed by one's own family members. Specifically, women in the family were expected, as a part of their domestic duties, to oversee and execute the sanitization, dressing, and ultimately burial of their families' corpses.[9] However, following the number of deaths during the Civil War, the practice of embalming became commonplace, as fallen soldiers had to be preserved before their bodies could be transported vast distances from the battlefield back to their hometowns. Following the war, it became the norm to have loved-ones bodies prepared and cared for by morticians, and spaces for services to be provided by funeral home directors.[10] Coinciding with the professionalization of the funeral industry, the advances of the medical field changed expectations around an infectious disease course. That is, rather than comfort care, medical providers began to offer life-saving, and thus life-changing measures, e.g. antibiotics.[11] This resulted in a change in the concentration of the placement of ill-people: rather than remaining at home, people began to rely increasingly on hospitals as a place of healing, especially in urban areas where hospitals were more accessible.[12] In areas that allowed for access to hospital systems, this inevitably resulted in a greater proportion of deaths occurring in hospitals rather than at home, thus bolstering the change from home-based care to professional, funeral home-based care of the deceased in the urban West.[9]

In other countries, the social practices around deathcare vary compared to the U.S. For instance, in Hindu culture, women have been barred from attending cremation rituals, and even from touching the deceased.[13] Before World War Two in Britain, women were "commonly responsible for laying-out the body", but following the war were barred from such a role given the expedient professionalization of the deathcare industry.[14]

21st century

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Examples of government policy involvement include the impact of new burial methods like human composting[15] to pressures like COVID-19 placing on those involved with deathcare as well as their families.[16][17][18] In addition to government policy, the effects of COVID-19 have directly impacted those involved in deathcare: funeral directors were shown to have increased rates of burnout following the first wave of the pandemic.[19]

Delivery

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Government

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National and regional governments are often responsible for providing the legal framework for deathcare to operate within, including laws and guidance on what deathcare techniques, practices, and what individuals/ organisations are involved. However, this has a varying level of non-government organisations, third-sector, religious, and private organisations (such as funeral homes)[20] take part in both providing and shaping deathcare policy and practice.[21][22] However, most research on state interactions within deathcare is limited to the US, with further research needed elsewhere.[23]

Governments can also become a major focal point for deathcare services in specific situations, such as with deaths in the military, prisons, or in extraordinary events. COVID-19 is an example of global governmental intervention to provide mass fatality management to cope with high human fatality around the world.[23] This also brought up issues of inequality and inequity within deathcare as some deaths throughout the pandemic were treated as "more tragic" compared to others, highlighted as a public values failure as economic productivity and social worth overruled public health and humanity.[24]

Industry

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Analysts have stated that the deathcare industry can be divided into three portions: the ceremony and tribute (funeral or memorial service); the disposition of remains through cremation or burial (interment); and memorialization in the form of monuments, marker inscriptions or memorial art.[25]

Deathcare industry is a multifactorial sector including, but not limited to: companies and organizations that provide services related to death memorials, funerals, and burials. Theses types of ceremonies includes service use of coffins, headstones, crematoriums, and funeral homes. Most of the death service industry has consisted of small businesses that have been consolidated as time has gone on.[26]

There is a global marketplace for deathcare in the produces, services, and insurance that surrounds someone's death. This is a market that has shown expanding fiscal growth in years 2020 to 2021 supported by a compound annual growth rate of 5.6%. The market is expected to continue to grow to a compound annual growth rate of 8% by year 2025 expecting to reach a value of 147.38 billion dollars up from 103.93 billion dollars in 2020.[27]

The deathcare process comes with multiple costs to allow for certain rituals to take place. Including to removal/transfer of remains to funeral homes (est $340), embalming (est $740), Hearse use ($340), metal burial casket (est $2500). The estimated median cost of funeral with burial and funeral was estimated by an NFDA news release to be $7640.[28]

Deathcare industrial complex (DIC) has been outlined as a concept, mirroring the military-industrial complex concept, in at least the US and potentially Western countries as an industry: "profit-driven, medicalised, de-ritualized and patriarchal [in] form, modern death care fundamentally distorts humans' relationship to mortality, and through it, nature".[29] The death care industry in the United States is deemed controversial due to high costs and negative environmental impacts.[4]

Localized efforts to reform and offer innovative deathcare practices can be seen in the natural deathcare movements such as human composting to natural burials.[9][30]

Environmental impact

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Common funeral practices in Western society are associated with notable environmental impacts.[31] Metal caskets can deteriorate and release harmful toxins when buried, leading to contamination of land and water.[31] Cremation also uses a significant amount of fuel consumption, releasing chemicals and carbon emissions.[31]

With the threat of climate change, conversations about green death practices are becoming more prevalent.[31] Natural burial methods are being developed to promote eco-sustainability in deathcare.[31]

References

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  1. ^ Marsh, Tanya (2018). "The Death Care Revolution" (PDF). Wake Forest Journal of Law & Policy. 8 (1): 1–4.
  2. ^ Hill, Christine (1997-11-12). "Evaluating the quality of after death care". Nursing Standard. 12 (8): 36–39. doi:10.7748/ns1997.11.12.8.36.c2487. ISSN 0029-6570. PMID 9418467.
  3. ^ Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics; University of Colorado Boulder MENV (2021-10-24). "Essential Death care workers briefing book" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-10-24. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  4. ^ a b Kopp, Steven W.; Kemp, Elyria (2007). "The Death Care Industry: A Review of Regulatory and Consumer Issues". The Journal of Consumer Affairs. 41 (1): 150–173. doi:10.1111/j.1745-6606.2006.00072.x. ISSN 0022-0078. JSTOR 23860018.
  5. ^ "Healthcare vs. health care – Correct Spelling – Grammarist". grammarist.com. 10 May 2011. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  6. ^ Spellman, W. M. (2015). A brief history of death. London. ISBN 978-1780235042. OCLC 905380333.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Gordon, Michael (2015-01-29). "Rituals in Death and Dying: Modern Medical Technologies Enter the Fray". Rambam Maimonides Medical Journal. 6 (1): e0007. doi:10.5041/RMMJ.10182. PMC 4327323. PMID 25717389.
  8. ^ Brennan, Michael (2014). The A–Z of death and dying : social, medical, and cultural aspects. Santa Barbara, California. ISBN 978-1440803437. OCLC 857234356.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ a b c Olson, Philip R. (2018-06-01). "Domesticating Deathcare: The Women of the U.S. Natural Deathcare Movement". Journal of Medical Humanities. 39 (2): 195–215. doi:10.1007/s10912-016-9424-2. ISSN 1573-3645. PMID 27928653. S2CID 43800390.
  10. ^ Finney, Redmond; Shulman, Lisa M.; Kheirbek, Raya E. (April 2022). "The Corpse: Time for Another Look A Review of the Culture of Embalming, Viewing and the Social Construction". The American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Care. 39 (4): 477–480. doi:10.1177/10499091211025757. ISSN 1938-2715. PMID 34219498. S2CID 235734505.
  11. ^ Lowey, Susan E. (2015-12-14). "A Historical Overview of End-of-Life Care".
  12. ^ Rainsford, Suzanne; MacLeod, Roderick D; Glasgow, Nicholas J (September 2016). "Place of death in rural palliative care: A systematic review". Palliative Medicine. 30 (8): 745–763. doi:10.1177/0269216316628779. ISSN 0269-2163. PMID 26944531. S2CID 4682978.
  13. ^ Baker, Hugh D. R. (December 1989). "Death Ritual in Late Imperial and Modern China. Edited by James L. Watson and Evelyn S. Rawski. [Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press, 1988. 334 pp. $4000.]". The China Quarterly. 120: 875–876. doi:10.1017/s0305741000018658. ISSN 0305-7410. S2CID 155077233.
  14. ^ Howarth, Glennys (2016). Last Rites. doi:10.4324/9781315224251. ISBN 978-1315224251.
  15. ^ "Human composting could be the future of deathcare". The Guardian. 2020-02-16. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  16. ^ APPG PPG for Funerals and Bereavement (2021-01-01). APPG 2020 2021 Annual Report.
  17. ^ "Digitization In Deathcare". Forbes. Columbia Business School – Eugene Lang Entrepreneurship Center. Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  18. ^ Denborough, David; Sanders, Cody J. "Death-care practices in the shadow of the pandemic: Can history help us?". International Journal of Narrative Therapy and Community Work (2): 20–33.
  19. ^ Van Overmeire, Roel; Van Keer, Rose-Lima; Cocquyt, Marie; Bilsen, Johan (2021-12-10). "Compassion fatigue of funeral directors during and after the first wave of COVID-19". Journal of Public Health (Oxford, England). 43 (4): 703–709. doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdab030. ISSN 1741-3850. PMC 7989438. PMID 33635314.
  20. ^ West Park Healthcare Centre, Ontario, Canada; Anderson, Barbara (2017-05-17). "Facilitating person-centred after-death care: unearthing assumptions, tradition and values through practice development". International Practice Development Journal. 7 (1): 1–8. doi:10.19043/ipdj.71.006.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  21. ^ United States Government Accountability Office (2011). "Death Services: State Regulation of the Death Care Industry Varies and Officials Have Mixed Views on Need for Further Federal Involvement" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-05-18. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  22. ^ UK Competition & Markets Authority (2020). "Funerals market investigation: Quality regulation remedies" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-06-16. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  23. ^ a b Entress, Rebecca M.; Tyler, Jenna; Zavattaro, Staci M.; Sadiq, Abdul-Akeem (2020-01-01). "The need for innovation in deathcare leadership". International Journal of Public Leadership. 17 (1): 54–64. doi:10.1108/IJPL-07-2020-0068. ISSN 2056-4929. S2CID 228855678.
  24. ^ Zavattaro, Staci M.; Entress, Rebecca; Tyler, Jenna; Sadiq, Abdul-Akeem (2021). "When Deaths Are Dehumanized: Deathcare During COVID-19 as a Public Value Failure". Administration & Society. 53 (9): 1443–1462. doi:10.1177/00953997211023185. ISSN 0095-3997. S2CID 236312716.
  25. ^ Lawton, William (September 12, 2022). "Industry Focus: Death Care" (PDF). 2016.export.gov. Archived from the original on September 27, 2022. Retrieved September 12, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  26. ^ Cummins, Eleanor. "How 'Big Funeral' Made the Afterlife So Expensive". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  27. ^ PR Newswire (2021). "Global Death Care Services Market Report (2021 to 2030) – COVID-19 Impact and Recovery". Retrieved 2021-10-24.
  28. ^ "2019 NFDA General Price List Study Shows Funeral Costs Not Rising As Fast As Rate of Inflation". nfda.org. Retrieved 2022-09-12.
  29. ^ Westendorp, Mariske; Gould, Hannah (2021). "Re-Feminizing Death: Gender, Spirituality and Death Care in the Anthropocene". Religions. 12 (8): 667. doi:10.3390/rel12080667. hdl:11343/289692.
  30. ^ Harker, Alexandra (2012). "Landscapes of the Dead: an Argument for Conservation Burial". Berkeley Planning Journal. 25 (1). doi:10.5070/BP325111923.
  31. ^ a b c d e Shelvock, Mark; Kinsella, Elizabeth Anne; Harris, Darcy (2021). "Beyond the Corporatization of Death Systems: Towards Green Death Practices". Illness, Crisis & Loss. 30 (4): 640–658. doi:10.1177/10541373211006882. ISSN 1054-1373. PMC 9403370. PMID 36032317.
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