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Australia/DeathBack
[Published: Wednesday July 04 2018]

 Australia doctors moot death on school timetable

 
QUEENSLAND, Australia 4 Jul (ANA) - The Australian Medical Association Queensland has proposed death as part of school timetable saying they want young people to be made more familiar with talking about the end of life.
 
Doctors say that improvements in medicine and an ageing population mean that there are rising numbers of families facing difficult questions about their elderly relatives and how they will face their last days.
 
But too often young people in the West are not prepared for talking about such difficult decisions. There is a taboo around the subject and most deaths happen out of sight in hospitals.
 
Pupils might have reservations about lessons in death education.
 
But the Australian doctors argue that if the law and ethics around palliative care and euthanasia were taught in classrooms, it would make such issues less "traumatic" and help people to make better informed decisions.
 
Queensland GP (General Practioner) Dr Richard Kidd says young people can find themselves having to make decisions about how relatives are treated in their dying days.
 
"I have seen people as young as 21 being thrust into the role of power of attorney," he says.
 
Their lack of knowledge makes it a steep learning curve in "how to do things in a way that is in the best interests of their loved ones and complies with the law", he says.
 
He says the taboo around death means that families usually avoid discussing until it is too late. Most people do not know how their relatives want to be treated if the worst happens.
 
"So we need to start preparing young people and getting them to have tough conversations with their loved ones," he says.
 
"Death lessons" could include the legal aspects of what mental and physical capacity means, how to draw up a will and an advanced care plan, and the biological processes of dying and death.
 
These topics could be incorporated into existing subjects, such as biology, medicine, ethics and law.
 
Dr Kidd says education around death would help countries like Australia, the US and the UK follow the example of Mexico, where death is an important part of the culture and even celebrated in the Day of the Dead festival.(ANA)
FA/ANA/4 July 2018------
 
 

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