Something to Think About
a blog on end of life
- All posts
- advance directive
- alzheimers
- Anger
- anticipatory grief
- Approaching Death
- bereaved
- Bereavement
- burnout
- BY YOUR SIDE A Guide for Caring for the Dying at Home
- cancer
- caregiver
- caregiver fatigue
- caregiver support
- caregivers
- caregiving at end of life
- choking
- comfort care
- corona virus
- covid 19
- Covid Talk
- Death
- death and dying
- death call
- death care
- death doula
- death education
- death midwife
- death of a pet
- death rally
- dementia
- denial
- doctors
- dying
- dying looks different than expected
- dying pet
- dying process
- Dynamics of Dying
- Eating or not eating
- Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
- end of life
- end of life care
- end of life doula
- end of life education
- end of life planning
- family caregiver
- Fear
- fluids
- Food
- food at end of life
- front line workers
- Gone From My Sight
- Grief
- Grief Counselor
- grief support
- Guilt
- HCP
- Home Care
- home death
- home health
- home healthcare
- hospice
- Hospice Blue Book
- hospice care
- hospice chaplain
- hospice education
- hospice end of life care
- hospice myths
- hospice nurse
- hospice nurses
- hospice patient
- hospice physician
- hospice referral
- Hospice Social Worker
- Hospice Staff
- hospice volunteer
- How Do I Know You? Dementia at the End of Life
- Hydration or dehydration
- labor at end of life
- magazine article
- media
- Medicare
- New Rules For End Of Life Care
- Nursing home
- older pet
- Online Course
- pain
- pain at end of life
- pain management
- pain relief
- Pet death
- Pet illness
- physician
- podcast
- PODCASTS & RADIO LIBRARY
- Print Library
- regret
- senior care
- signs of approaching death
- signs of dying
- Spanish literature on death
- stages of grief
- terminal
- terminal agitation
- terminal diagnosis
- terminal illness
- terminal restlessness
- The Eleventh Hour
- The Final Act of Living
- Unity Online Radio
- video
- VLOG Library
- Webinar Library
- widow
- widowhood
- You Need Care Too
- YouTube
What can be done for patients who feel abandoned after being told that the treatments are no longer working and they are "terminal"?
In end of life care, all the attention focuses on the person who is dying. We also need to give support to the family caregiver, the "unsung hero".
What are the three signs that let caregivers know their special person is appropriate for hospice care?
Barbara Karnes, RN, award-winning end-of-life educator and hospice nurse, explains what hospice is and the support it provides to a person with a life-limiting diagnosis and their family in her...
Kimberly Mann and Kim Crabill of Hospice of Southern Maine talk with Barbara Karnes about how death doulas work alongside hospice teams to support patients and families at end of...
In Part Two of our conversation with End of Life Educator and Hospice Pioneer Barbara Karnes, unpacks what really happens in thefinal days of life—and why so many families feel...
From the importance of guiding families through fear, to the role of the clinician as an "invisible conductor," this episode is a profound reminder: end-of-life care is about people, not...
Whether you're a healthcare professional, caregiver, or someone navigating their own fears about death, Barbara's reflections shed light on how we can normalize and honor this natural process...
A couple months ago, She Rises Magazine asked for women to answer this question, "What Will Be Your Greatest Legacy?" Such a great idea to ponder. As an exercise, I...
On this episode, Barbara discusses end of life care and supporting caregivers as well as the normal dying process.
This is my response to a physician’s NY Times opinion about hospice care, clarifying what hospice was meant to be—education, caregiver support, and comfort at the end of life...
This episode aims to open minds and demystify death, dying, and grief, encouraging listeners to prepare and embrace end-of-life conversations.
What would happen if you had a conversation about this with somebody in your life? Maybe not a person who’s dying currently, but maybe someone close to you, a sibling,...
In the United States how we approach illness is the medical model addresses diseases that people happen to have and end of life care addresses people that happen to have...
In this conversation, Barbara offers profound wisdom: she offers a map, a presence, a way of holding death that allows us to also hold life more fully...
Barbara also delves into practical topics such as the appropriate use of food and fluids at the end of life, the natural stages of dying, terminal agitation, and the critical...
After losing her beloved mother, librarian Michelle Hilburn shares her personal journey through grief and the books that helped her—and her children—cope with the loss. From hospice to healing, she...
Today we discuss the importance of a team approach to care on hospice and the roles played by each member of the team...
Dr. Terri Daniel invites Hospice Pioneer Barbara Karnes, RN to answer your questions about death, dying and bereavement in this bold new podcast where no subject is too sensitive or...
For 65 years basically we were "a we", and then this last year I became "a me". And I don't know how to be "a me". I've had to learn...
Barbara discusses why death is a communal, emotional event, not just a medical one. She reveals how end-of-life care can be transformed into a sacred, meaningful experience for everyone involved.







