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Medicine and Health Sciences

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City University of New York (CUNY)

Theses/Dissertations

End of life

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Everyone Is Watching: Mastering The Challenge Of Caring For Infants At The End Of Life While Being Constantly Observed, Deborah A. Lawrence Jun 2021

Everyone Is Watching: Mastering The Challenge Of Caring For Infants At The End Of Life While Being Constantly Observed, Deborah A. Lawrence

Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Nurses with specialized training care for the approximately 7% of newly born infants who are admitted annually to neonatal intensive care units in the United States. Although they receive care at advanced levels, some infants will not survive. Nurses maintain a constant presence at the bedsides of these neonates to provide end of life care in units and institutions where the gold standard is cure and rescue. The purpose of this grounded theory research study was to understand how nurses managed the challenges and demands of caring for dying infants in the context of Level III neonatal intensive care units. …


Byrd, Maya Dangerfield Dec 2015

Byrd, Maya Dangerfield

Capstones

In April 2015, William Byrd Wilkins or ‘Byrd’, 50, a theatre and television actor, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. In August, his friends crowd-funded an all expense paid trip to New York for Byrd who wasundergoing chemotherapy in his rural hometown of Louisburg, North Carolina. Originally described as ‘an opportunity to reconnect’ the trip soon developed into a ‘living funeral’ as Byrd and his friends grappled with Byrd’s terminal prognosis. As he visited his favorite New York haunts and met with friends, Byrd wrestled with the decision to end his chemotherapy upon his return home.


Battle Echoes Never Fade: Soldiers' Trauma At The End Of Life, John E. Eller Dec 2015

Battle Echoes Never Fade: Soldiers' Trauma At The End Of Life, John E. Eller

Capstones

Soldiers suffer moral injuries when wartime experiences go against their own moral compass, such as killing innocent civilians or mutilating the bodies of enemies. Many soldiers bury the shame and guilt leftover from battle for years or decades, but these memories can surface unbidden as veterans near death.