The Huffington Post have published an article I wrote on art and death. The edited version can be seen here. The original blog follows.
Tweet about this post
Follow on twitter
-
Recent Posts
My vital statistics
- 42,000 hits
- art care compassion CPR death doctor empathy ethics grief health human life medicine NHS patient Philosophy politics privatisation welfare state wellbeing
-
Join 105 other subscribers
Blogroll
- AbetterNHS Blog by GP Dr Jonathan Tomlinson about the relationships between GPs and patients and how health policy impacts on that 0
- Centre for Sustainable Healthcare CSH offers strategic input and consultancy on sustainable healthcare research and practice to national and local programmes. 0
- Culture Health and Wellbeing Alliance The Culture, Health and Wellbeing Alliance is a sector support organisation for the cultural sector, funded by Arts Council England. It is here to connect everyone who believes that creative and cultural engagement can transform our health and wellbeing, 0
- Dying Matters Raising awareness of death, dying and bereavement 0
- HealthCulture A bioethicist’s views on health, medicine, anxiety, old and new media, medicalization, healthism, and the history of ideas. 0
- Keep Our NHS Public 0
- Life.Death.Whatever #LifeDeathWhatever is an initiative to redesign the dialogue around death and dying. We’re not just about death; our work is about how to make the most of our finite lives. 0
- London Arts in Health Forum LAHF supports artists and health professionals across the whole of London and beyond, promoting excellence and engagement in the field of arts & wellbeing, and extending the reach of the arts to communities and individuals who would otherwise be exclu 0
- MedAct Health Professionals for a safer, fairer, better world 0
- MedHumChat A Twitter-based discussion of poetry and prose with a mission of fostering reflection, empathy and connection in healthcare 0
- Medical Futility Professor Thaddeus Pope tracks judicial, legislative, policy, and academic developments concerning medical futility and the limits on individual autonomy at the end of life. 0
- Patients not Passports 0
- Plant Based Health Professionals UK 0
- Prof Allyson Pollock Professor of public health research and policy at Queen Mary, University of London. Interests include globalisation; privatisation, marketisation and PFI / PPPs; health services; regulation and trade;and pharmaceuticals and clinical trials. 0
-
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.