English
- The social importance of food (0:33)
- When appetite stops (1:34)
- It's different when it's your own family (1:59)
- It's okay to ask (1:12)
- A place to start video id 150344732 not found
- Realizing the end is near (1:10)
- Advance care planning (0:56)
- Anxiety and shortness of breath (1:13)
- Planning to manage symptoms (0:40)
- What can palliative care do for me? (1:21)
- Preparing for side effects (1:00)
- When does palliative care start? (1:13)
- Humour helps (1:13)
- Explaining scary terms (2:34)
- Palliative team support for caregivers (1:59)
- Making sure patients understand video id 150487364 not found
- Write down your questions! (0:53)
- Culture affects medical decisions (2:18)
- A hospice where we live? (1:21)
- "Queen of the bad news" (1:16)
- Caring for the whole family (1:42)
- Traditional medicines at end of life (1:26)
- Traditional and western medicine (1:11)
- Fear of pain medication (1:55)
- Accepting our roles (1:35)
- Acceptance means no struggle (1:15)
- A beautiful death (3:41)
- The presence of calm (1:14)
- We walk with our own people (0:45)
- Dying at home (1:40)
- Honouring sacred wishes (1:23)
- Talking about death (1:11)
- Wiping the tears ceremony (1:58)
- Traditions and grief (1:55)
- Group help for grief (2:02)
- Making memories (1:45)
- The anger of grief (1:19)
- Songs of strength (0:41)
- Final days and final words (3:43)
- When Mom came home to die (3:15)
- Looking after my grandmother (2:29)
- Relationship with Mother Earth (1:19)
- Caring for someone at home (1:23)
- Letting go (2:16)
- Returning to my culture (0:53)
- The comfort of spiritual beliefs (1:02)
- My mother's wishes (2:14)
- Gathering strength (0:43)
- Honour and let go (1:33)
- A time to cry (1:10)
- Grief comes in waves (0:57)
- Haida G'waii fire ceremonies (2:15)
- Reincarnation (1:24)
- Help for the spirit (2:02)
- You feel so good after (0:57)
- Ask, listen and respect (1:01)
- After death beliefs (0:25)
- Self-smudging ceremony (1:03)
- Smudging ceremony (1:33)
- Helping others mourn and heal (2:29)
- Moving to the spirit world (1:37)
- The comfort of ceremonies (1:31)
- Traditional foods are medicine (2:06)
- Traditional foods in hospital (0:58)
- Knowing what to expect (1:52)
- Spaces to gather (1:05)
- Balancing medical care and personal needs (1:11)
- The right to ask (1:24)
- Towards culturally safe care (1:02)
- Connecting through silence (1:57)
- Encouraging communication (2:09)
- Welcoming silence (1:30)
- The meaning of spirit (1:08)
- Improving caring connections (0:59)
- Everything is connected (1:54)
- A new setting for Indigenous spirituality (1:46)
- Accepting death (1:56)
- A history of mistreatment (1:25)
- Healing circle (1:25)
- Our music brings comfort (1:00)
- Opening a window (1:21)
- Go freely now (1:29)
- Opening the door (1:37)
- Preparing the body for the spirit world (2:41)
- One year to grieve (1:27)
- Be a human being (1:42)
- Communicating in the old ways (1:43)
- What does my diagnosis mean? (2:20)
- The myths of palliative care (1:48)
- What is palliative care? (1:02)
- Communication tips for health care providers (0:38)
- Improving communication (0:31)
- Mom wanted to die at home (1:20)
- When death at home is not best (1:13)
- Caring for our mother (1:09)
- Changes in personality (2:03)
- Family grief and healing (0:39)
- The benefit of a family meeting (1:43)
- Indigenous Voices: Ceremony, Tradition and Spirituality (21:41)
- Indigenous Voices: Caring for the Patient and Family (16:50)
- Indigenous Voices: Walking Along Side for a Good Death (21:22)
- Indigenous Voices: Honouring Our Loss and Grief (23:07)
- Silence in communication (1:12)
- Birds and mammals: Spiritual links to the Creator (1:32)
- Saying final words and letting a loved one go (1:42)
- Time, silence and respect in end of life care (2:21)
- Discharging patients to a remote community (1:33)
- A good death (0:48)
- Accessing pain control in small communities (1:09)
- Planning a discharge in advance (3:43)
- Caring in small communities (1:21)
- Using community resources to support home death (3:43)
- Opening conversations about advance care planning (1:41)
- Elders often do not talk about death or illness (1:01)
- Traditions when a person dies at home (0:43)
- How a community shows support (1:36)
- Combining traditional and Christian values (2:01)
- Death, trauma and healing in the Indigenous community (1:50)
- A good death (0:34)
- Challenges for people from rural communities traveling for care (2:13)
- The fight to live (1:37)
- Respecting a person's chosen gender (1:15)
- Two spirit and LGBTQ+ people and end of life wishes (2:26)
- Culturally safe urban health spaces (1:17)
- The importance of holistic care across healthcare settings (1:09)
- Hospice options needed for Indigenous people (1:18)
- Making plans makes a difference (1:12)
- Having conversations about end of life and grief (3:06)
- Use your five senses to engage and listen carefully (1:50)
- Dying at home (1:37)
- Helping a patient with final wishes (1:20)
- Reflecting Indigenous culture in healthcare delivery video id 410257402 not found
- Providing a safe space for your patients (1:34)
- Understanding holistic healthcare (1:03)
- Healthcare and cultural nuances (1:17)
- What cultural safety means to me (1:15)
- Celebrating life before death (2:13)
- MAID is now an option (1:28)
- Helping other families by sharing stories of suicide and loss (2:27)
- Self-care and support in my work (1:54)
- Grief is complex and differs with each situation (1:54)
- Caring for patients and families at end of life (3:36)
- Spirituality is not only about religion (0:48)
- Respecting wishes at the end of life (3:07)
- Traditions differ among families (0:48)
- Giving thanks for a peaceful death (1:26)
- Reclaiming who we are as a people (2:12)
- Trauma informed care requires an understanding of history (3:28)
- It takes a healthy child to raise a healthy village (1:20)
- Our healing affects generations (1:06)
- Religious influences in my life (4:02)
- The comfort of a Bible and prayer at end of life (1:40)
- Why we prefer our home to a hospital (1:33)
- Understanding and respecting cultural ways of knowing and wishes (3:40)
- When a loved one is on life support (1:47)
- Saying goodbye when a relationship is complicated (2:59)
- Supporting a family at the bedside of a loved one (2:35)
- Taking the opportunity to say goodbye (1:40)
- When you are "stuck" in grief (1:30)
- Different ways to help you grieve (2:55)
- Leading individuals in prayer when they are dying (2:32)
- Talking about end of life is difficult but important (1:53)
- Honouring end of life wishes (2:51)
- The importance of listening, understanding and building relationships (3:18)
- Healthcare providers must self-educate about Indigenous history and culture (0:58)
- Understanding Indigenous culture and history (3:50)
- Society could benefit from Indigenous practices and ways of knowing (3:41)
- The power of medicinal trees and plants (1:12)
- A perspective on a friend's cancer diagnosis (2:15)
- Our ancestors bring comfort at end of life (1:59)
- Using plant medicines with guidance from our ancestors (1:41)
- My diagnosis affected my work, my education and my finances (1:02)
- Using traditional medicine and western medicine (2:01)
- The strength of my grandmother (2:41)
- We're not just another chart (0:44)
- My doctor showed no empathy: Advocating for compassionate care (4:21)
- Facing a second diagnosis (1:00)
- The stress of travelling for scans and tests (1:43)
- Losing my hair (1:15)
- Talking to my children about my cancer and treatment (2:45)
- My spirituality helped me find balance and strength (2:43)
- Supporting conversations between patients and family (1:10)
- Supporting communities in the North (1:43)
- Palliative care offers many layers of care (1:22)
- Palliative care is holistic care (0:46)
- Pain control in remote communities (1:17)
- The challenges of discharge planning (1:17)
- Navigating health services (1:25)
- Social media and respecting privacy (0:52)
- We're not in this together (0:42)
- Supporting decision-making (2:20)
- A good death: Planning for the best and adapting (1:15)
- Understand individual wishes and beliefs (1:26)
- Provide culturally safe, person-centred care (2:15)
- When there aren't words for an illness or disease (0:45)
- Language around death and dying (1:08)
- Recording our values (1:23)
- Supporting patient and family decision-making (1:14)
- The benefits of a healing room in a hospital (2:15)
- Our palliative care doctor helped guide us (1:02)
- Supporting families through a palliative care journey (2:00)
- How children can honour their loved ones through ceremony (2:56)
- Reflecting on the year after my mom's death (3:04)
- Honouring our mom after she died (2:14)
- Traditions in the last few days of life (1:09)
- Everyone says goodbye in their own way (2:19)
- Honouring and caring for my mom (1:48)
- Understanding and respecting the care needs of residential school survivors (2:38)
- Hospitalization and residential school trauma (2:19)
- Caring for our Elders in community (3:49)
- Traditions when a loved one dies (2:17)
- Sharing love and support with family (2:23)
- The importance of traditional food (0:54)
- Staying at the hospital with my Auntie (2:18)
- The importance of being out on the land (0:46)
- Caring for loved ones at end of life (1:35)
- Thinking about how we can support escorts and families in need (1:59)
- Getting to know the Elders in small communities (1:51)
- I try to support people in my community who are sick (1:09)
- It's a tradition in our community to have a homemade casket (0:58)
- Talking about death can help with grief (3:06)
- My mother didn't want young grandchildren at her burial (2:00)
- It's important to talk to our children about death (2:00)
- The birth of my daughter brought joy to my sick father (1:19)
- Seeing people in remission gives us hope (0:28)
- There's no word for cancer in our language (1:34)
- When someone wants to die in their home community (1:32)
- It was very hard for me to accept my father's death (0:58)
- Managing pain medications and affect on grief (1:30)
- My father came home to die (1:12)
- My father's diagnosis (1:53)
- Understanding death and aging (3:10)
- I always want to keep learning and living for today (4:09)
- The impacts of residential school: Finding my own identity (4:10)
- Talking to our grandchildren about how things have changed (3:31)
- I speak up so our people our treated with respect (2:21)
- Talking to my husband about end of life wishes (2:26)
- My son's cancer diagnosis (3:35)
- Interpreters and navigators are very helpful (1:15)
- Learn about the community and its people (2:37)
- Making amends and asking for forgiveness (1:57)
- Knowing my own boundaries and caring for myself (1:47)
- How I think of "hope" at the end of life (1:45)
- Asking someone what they wish for at the end of life (1:34)
- Blending religious and traditional practices (1:46)
- My perspective on death and dying (0:33)
- Death "out of season": When a young person dies (2:17)
- Supporting families providing care (2:42)
- Helping people leave the world with music, calm and grace (3:44)
- Explaining the life cycle to children (3:45)
- It's about the person's last breaths on Mother Earth (2:03)
- God is waiting: Helping people who are leaving this plain (2:42)
- The fear of dying and the power of companionship (1:42)
- Completing your purpose (1:12)
- Religion, hymns and drumming (1:47)
- The Native Grieving Prayer (2:47)
- My sister is still with us in spirit (0:55)
- Ceremony for my sister (3:05)
- Talking about your pain can help you on your healing journey (1:08)
- Helping community when traumatic death occurs (2:24)
- I counsel and pray with people in my community (1:19)
- My kids feel helpless but they care for me (1:09)
- Being open with my family (2:17)
- Learning about my disease and educating others (1:08)
- Both laughter and tears are good for you (1:47)
- Healthcare providers need to make sure patients understand (1:39)
- It's important to bring an escort to appointments (2:00)
- I've learned a lot from my support group (1:24)
- I try to remain positive when I think about my cancer (2:41)
- Helping people talk about loss (2:34)
- Talking about death at end of life (2:10)
- Maintaining hope and moving through grief (2:31)
- Honoring a person as they are dying (2:18)
- Many First Nations Elders want to die at home (2:14)
- Embrace your memories (1:11)
- Self-care (1:58)
- Show compassion until the last breath (2:15)
- Gestures and beliefs that can help with grief (1:32)
- Death is not the end (1:19)
- Challenging the health system to honour culturally safer care (1:39)
- How can we best care for you? (1:39)
- Walk with a person at end of life (1:31)
- Accompanying and Elder and her family as she transitioned to the spirit world (4:13)
- When a child dies (1:34)
- Talking about end of life can help to bring comfort (2:35)
- The person legacy lives on through what they've taught me (1:11)
- Caring for all aspects of the person (1:17)
- Supporting cultural traditions and practices (3:02)
- Traditional music and spiritual care (1:14)
- Wearing a clerical collar and misconceptions about spiritual care (2:28)
- Self-care helps me stay on track and focused (2:00)
- Spritual care at end of life (2:34)
- Hospital changes to meet the needs of Indigneous patients (1:39)
- Celebrating similarities in belief systems (1:39)
- The importance of fire (1:39)
- Adapting cultural practices in health facilities (1:52)
- Community members as supports at the bedside (1:47)
- Navigating health language and health systems (2:50)
- Creating a care plan for spiritual and emotional care (1:48)
- Why cultural practices differ in remote communities (1:59)
- Providing spiritual support in a hospital setting (2:56)
- Understanding and respecting the person's wishes (4:43)
- Feel your own grief (1:45)
- Our dignity (button) blanket (2:52)
- The importance of laughter (4:58)
- Western philosophy and Indigenous philosophy (2:55)
- A doctor I'll never forget: Excellent culturally safe care (1:08)
- Meeting families where they are at (2:49)
- Avoid making assumptions (2:02)
- Educating healthcare providers about Indigenous history to improve care (2:37)
- Impact of residential schools on grief (7:30)
- Colonization, trauma and responses to dying and grief (4:15)
- Listening and taking time (5:11)
- Use clear language (1:15)
- Respecting ceremony (1:15)
- The words you use matter: How some words shut down discussion (1:04)
- Paying attention to everyone in the room (2:17)
- How I care for and protect myself (4:14)
- Having a personal relationship with the patient and family (1:21)
- Working with patients and families (4:42)
- Losing my hair (1:09)
- Cancer has brought us closer (1:24)
- Waiting for the other shoe to drop: Living with cancer (1:47)
- Support from my cancer community (0:48)
- I was offered very little support or compassion (1:13)
- Support from my husband made the difference (1:08)
- Sharing my diagnosis within our community (1:48)
- My treatment and additional diagnosis (1:33)
- My doctor is interested in my life, not just my cancer (0:54)
- My diagnosis was given with no compassion (1:53)
- Travelling for care is exhausting (0:28)
- We've faced prejudice before (0:55)
- We had to fight to have an escort for my appointments (0:42)
- Fighting to get a diagnosis (3:18)
- Staying positive helps to take the power away from the word "cancer" (3:10)
- Ceremony helps families to grieve (3:39)
- Thinking about quality of life for my mom and our Elders (2:58)
- Take time to listen to what Elders are telling you (2:01)
- Recognizing impacts the trauma of residential schools on longterm care residents (10:42)
- Supporting families to be present when the person is transitioning (1:31)
- Talking to families about the transition (3:51)
- Extensive loss and trauma complicates grief (2:29)
- Long-term care reminds some residents of residential school (2:09)
- Let the patient take the lead (0:48)
- Building trust is key to creating solid relationships (0:46)
- Asking questions and listening to answers (1:22)
- Why someone might not self-identify as Indigenous (2:28)
- Understanding the needs of the urban Indigenous population (2:48)
- Opening up a difficult conversation about death (1:53)
- End of life planning as celebrating a legacy (2:16)
- Feeling a range of emotions can be healing (0:54)
- Giving people time to consider options and make decisions (2:32)
- Questioning our assumptions about traditions or religious practice (0:57)
- Trauma informed care recognizes past experince can impact current reactions (4:12)
- Trustful and respectful communication is key (1:37)
- Talking about death, dying and palliative care (3:22)
- Decolonizing healthcare: Questioning currrent policy (1:27)
- Making space for different ways of knowing and being (2:24)
- We have to be aware of our own biases and judgements (1:42)
- What does "patient centred care" really mean? (1:09)
- There is always a power differential in healthcare (2:47)
- We are all related (1:03)
- My job can be emotionally difficult (1:30)
- Working together to return a person to community (1:54)
- When someone is dying the community helps out (1:13)
- Oldest siblings often make care decisions (1:51)
- The benefits of a hospice (1:29)
- Traveling for care impacts families and care decisions (1:25)
- Late diagnoses of people from remote communities (2:02)
- Often patients from fly-in communities are Christian (1:46)
- Family meetings and making care plans (1:31)
- Escorts are often necessary, not just for Elders (1:31)
- Responding to challenges of travelling for care from remote communities (1:56)
- All the details can be overwhelming (1:05)
- My role as an Indigenous Patient Navigator at the Cancer Centre (1:42)
- I'm grateful for my good life (2:31)
- Be kind (0:37)
- It's good to talk about ceremony (0:55)
- We have to respect people's grief (1:12)
- My grandmother was religious but also traditional (4:01)
- Helping my son cope with loss (4:01)
- Accepting the cycle of life (2:40)
- When someone dies, we help them on their journey (5:00)
- Grieving a death by suicide (2:00)
- Grief is painful whatever the age of the person (2:01)
- Supporting people going through loss (2:45)
- Discussing palliative care with patients (1:51)
- Caring for a loved one in the hospital can be hard (1:24)
- A tribute to my mom (6:37)
- Practical advice for people travelling for care (1:46)
- Care conversations when "palliative care" and "cancer" can't be used (1:07)
- Losing their support system (1:15)
- Providing palliative care at home in small communities (1:12)
- Respecting a person's rights to make informed decisions (1:02)
- Family support for care in the home (0:44)
- Never make assumptions about basic services (1:37)
- Caring for my wife (5:35)
- Building on strengths in communities (1:39)
- Medication and pain control in remote communities (2:25)
- Discharging a patient for care at home (3:42)
- Collaboration between community and health systems (1:41)
- Making decisions about treatment and leaving community (2:28)
- Care is a community responsibility (1:40)
- Grief and Indigenous healthcare providers (1:26)
- Holly Prince (1:08)
- Building trusting relationships (1:46)
- Supporting families during dying (0:57)
- Holly Prince (2:07)
- Trust, respect and honest communication (1:13)
- Adapting language about palliative care (3:16)
- Practicing true person-centred care (1:09)
- Empowering patients and families to ask questions (0:58)
- Humility and respect: Building a relationship with families (2:29)
- Providing culturally safe care (1:44)
- How communities rally when someone is ill (1:09)
- Validating caregiving in First Nations communities (2:06)
- The goal of providing care in communities (1:01)
- Quality care recognizes extended families (3:10)
- Understanding advance care planning (1:40)
- Cultural humility (1:46)
- Limitations of cultural safety in the health system (1:03)
- Ensuring Indigneous Peoples' voices are heard (0:31)
- Sisters' last visit (1:57)
- The support of extended families: A personal story (1:57)
- My "work family" is a real support (0:53)
- Death can be peaceful (0:36)
- Crow and Wolf people take care of each other (2:06)
- Community supports the ill person and family (1:16)
- Letting the spirit go (1:34)
- Giving permission to let go (1:44)
- Using intuition in providing care (2:15)
- Asking questions and open communication (4:22)
- When someone dies: The importance of rituals and ceremony (2:09)
- Learning from a dying child (4:22)
- Self-care rituals (3:16)
- A special patient: Supporting an Elder's dying time (8:59)
- The spirit world is just a step away (0:58)
- Connecting to our land and to our spirit (2:06)
- I'm now at peace with my daughter's death (2:05)
- My daughter's death (3:44)
- It's not always possible to die at home (2:14)
- The spirit world (2:07)
- There's so much fear about death (3:16)
- Teaching our people to talk about their lives and their struggles (3:12)
- Counselling and helping people to heal (3:37)
- Be gentle and kind (1:18)
- A good death (1:03)
- Families can come together to give support (3:27)
- A connection continues after death (0:29)
- A special connection (2:07)
- Grief after my brother's death (2:26)
- Elders can guide funeral plans (3:29)
- Improving care away from home (1:32)
- An end to hunger and thirst (0:51)
- The family is in the dark (1:26)
- What palliative care will mean for you (1:40)
- I didn't know what it meant (1:33)
- Comfort in my own language (2:15)
- Respecting your wishes (0:48)
- The worst conversation (1:57)
- Care in your own language (0:43)
- Take notes and ask questions (1:06)
- Care for the caregiver (1:18)
- A calm, peaceful feeling (0:58)
- A job for everyone (1:25)
- It was the right thing to do (2:00)
- My rock (1:53)
- Living with grief (1:28)
- Inuit perspectives on death and dying (1:50)
- Advance care planning (0:57)
- Getting on the same page (1:41)
- Important conversations with my patients (1:43)
- Surrounded by love (1:28)
- Grief and celebration (0:53)
- How much to share? (0:45)
- The benefits of being cared for by your own people (1:06)
- Loss of traditional medicine (1:56)
- Teaching family about illness (1:15)
- Understanding medical language (1:35)
- What is a good death? (0:34)
- Learning to provide care (2:46)
- The importance of traditional foods (1:08)
- Common language is a comfort (1:54)
- Educating healthcare providers about culture, language and belief (2:03)
- "Home" can have two meanings (1:05)
- Keeping Elders in community (2:29)
- Dying in a foreign place (1:16)
- Financial impacts of long stays away from home for care (3:35)
- Traditional food or broth brings comfort and healing (2:04)
- Family roles (5:20)
- The choice to die at home must be made when travel is still possible (1:11)
- Choosing care away from home (2:11)
- Comfort with caregiving roles (1:07)
- The decision to provide care at home can change (1:57)
- Over simplifying langauge can be condescending (1:37)
- Clear communication counteracts fear based decision making. (1:06)
- There should be more support for caregivers and escorts (1:43)
- When my sister was diagnosed with a brain tumour (2:50)
- Our blood is the same colour (0:26)
- It's so important for people to learn about our history and culture (3:13)
- My wish for healthcare in Nunavut (0:58)
- Cultural roles and nursing: Speaking with Elders (2:09)
- Traditional ways of communicating changed after colonization (1:54)
- Speaking softly and calmly when delivering bad news (1:07)
- People panic when they hear the word "palliative" (1:24)
- Many people in the North mistrust the medical system (1:48)
- When a diagnosis is overwhelming (1:01)
- Lost in translation: There is no word for cancer (1:19)
- Interpreters can lead to misunderstanding (1:21)
- When Elders leave the comunity for care they often don't return (1:20)
- Travelling for care (1:50)
- Seeing a psychologist helped me a lot (2:02)
- An important gift from my son (1:46)
- Supporting others going through a similar experience (1:17)
- Being a hunter taught me what it meant to be strong (0:45)
- My relationship with my husband is stronger (0:57)
- Finding my strength again (2:04)
- Finding laughter and humour in difficult situatiions (1:36)
- Having music by my side helped me (1:09)
- I'm a survivor (1:09)
- I was afraid I wouldn't survive (1:30)
- Finacial stress: trying work while in treatment (0:40)
- It was often difficult to understand everything I was being told (1:15)
- Travelling for care: greater support and organization is needed (2:14)
- Traditional food was important to my healing (1:20)
- The support of my family and my community made me strong (2:07)
- Faciial expressions when communicating in Inuktitut (0:37)
- My brain cancer diagnosis (1:33)
- It is very frightening to be told that you have cancer (1:24)
- There was no one to talk to when I returned to my community (1:15)
- I could pray and worship at the boarding house chapel (1:00)
- Attending events in Ottawa helped to take my mind off my illness (1:34)
- What gave me hope and strength (0:38)
- How stress and distance affect communication (1:24)
- Missing my country food (1:13)
- Missing my husband (1:13)
- The challenges of living away from community for care (2:40)
- Thinking about end of life wishes now, prepares us for the future (1:10)
- Living in the north is about community (1:35)
- Discharge planning in northern communities (0:47)
- Discharge planning and dialysis (1:42)
- Proper discharge planning is crucial (1:31)
- More supports are needed (1:24)
- Challenges to end of life treatment in the North (2:01)
- Change is coming with a new generation (2:22)
- Death by suicide and grief and connections with colonialism and intergenerational trauma (4:10)
- If possible, keep doing things that you love (0:41)
- When my time comes I want to be buried in Nuajaat (1:03)
- Choosing community over treatment (1:45)
- "Nanilavut" (Let's Find Them): A program to find where loved ones who travelled south for care are buried (1:26)
- Imagine leaving your home and livelihood for 6 months (1:52)
- The cost and isolation of traveling for care is a burden (1:48)
- My daughter's cancer journey (9:21)
- Northern patients and family need support in urban settings (0:48)
- Why some families may not want a translator (1:54)
- Embracing a land-based approach (1:07)
- Being displaced from your community for healthcare (1:45)
- Supplying sewing supplies to patients and families (1:24)
- Ask your doctors for more explanations (1:07)
- Travel escorts can support each other (0:56)
- Caring for my sister made me a stronger person (6:48)
- My Mother's death: Dying away from family (5:44)
- Supporting our young people today (2:37)
- We borrow this life for a short time and must live in harmony (1:54)
- Closeness of family is important at end of life (1:33)
- Love is an important word in our culture (1:24)
- Inuit naming traditions (1:51)
- An Inuit-focused home for Elders with dementia and Alzheimers (6:15)
- It's important to be able to ask our doctors any questions that we have (2:36)
- Sharing the Inuit language (2:49)
- I believe in the afterlife (1:48)
- Saying comforting words to a loved one at death (2:58)
- Returning home when there is no more treatment available (3:33)
- Caring for cancer patients (3:06)
- We lost our connectino to shamanism (1:25)
- As Inuit we are resilient people (3:41)
- Culturally sensitive palliative care (2:23)
- Tips for health care providers (1:56)
- My proud Métis family (1:05)
- Family's capacity to care (1:19)
- Advocating for care (2:15)
- Talking about death (1:46)
- Dying away from home (2:13)
- The value of ceremonies (1:23)
- My end-of-life wishes (1:57)
- Hope or denial? (1:19)
- Palliative care is a new idea (0:46)
- Keeping loved ones away from the hospice (0:53)
- Hanging on at all costs (1:07)
- Over-feeding those we love (1:38)
- Talking about death makes it happen (1:06)
- A good death (1:24)
- Family meetings (0:52)
- Switching gears (0:51)
- Healing versus curing (2:10)
- Keep an open mind (1:34)
- Palliative care improves life video id 147185178 not found
- Choosing not to die at home (0:38)
- Food matters (1:06)
- The meaning of food and water (2:32)
- Advance care planning (1:54)
- What water symbolizes (0:47)
- Protection from the truth (1:50)
- Be patient, then listen (1:06)
- I don't want to talk about it (0:48)
- Explaining palliative care (2:26)
- The truth about hospice care (2:37)
- Why not homecare support? (1:39)
- Tips on discussing advance care planning (1:57)
- Pain, suffering and DNR (1:46)
- Understanding pain medications (2:00)
- Don't postpone family visits (1:10)
- When food no longer helps (1:42)
- What can I eat? (1:25)
- Thinking about dying (1:00)
- It's ok to cry (0:49)
- Living for this moment (1:23)
- When family is far away (2:12)
- Reaching out for support (2:10)
- Language challenges (2:14)
- I don't want to be a burden (2:16)
- My dad's experience with palliative care (1:31)
- Speaking with my parents about an end-of-life plan (1:31)
- Is cancer contagious? (1:46)
- Tradition and generation gaps (1:29)
- My mother's grief (4:10)
- Helping my mom (2:09)
- Towards independence (2:21)
- Support after death (1:38)
- Dad's wishes, Mom's wishes (2:13)
- Translators and counsellors (1:53)
- Palliative care is comfort care (1:36)
- Superstitions around death (2:24)
- Privacy about diagnosis (0:51)
- What makes a good death (0:56)
- Nurses are important (1:01)
- Fulfilling my father's wishes (2:47)
- Should we tell him he is dying? (2:41)
- Adapting to different families (1:03)
- Telling my dad (1:29)
- Advanced care planning is a gift (0:58)
- Palliative care is not "giving up hope" (1:21)
- Wanting to die at home (1:27)
- Helping families understand (1:16)
- We don't talk about death (2:00)
- No burdens for family (0:31)
- Talk to the whole family (1:13)
- Do secrets protect us? (1:40)
- Chinese voices: Ritual, tradition and spirituality (12:06)
- Chinese voices: Looking after the patient and family (11:47)
- Chinese voices: A good death: conversations that bring closure (18:02)
- Chinese voices: A daughter's story of after death and grief (6:55)
- Palliative care relieves pain (1:54)
- Only girls cry (2:02)
- Talking about illness helps in planning (1:19)
- Hoping for a miracle (1:59)
- Let's talk (2:14)
- Is hospital care the best care? (2:11)
- A good death (2:00)
- The community will show up (1:18)
- A private culture (1:54)
- We don't talk about dying (1:07)
- Denial and belief (1:45)
- Look away (1:33)
- Bad news is kept secret (1:36)
- Asking for help isn't shameful (4:25)
- Palliative care is important (1:11)
- Learning about palliative care (2:23)
- Palliative care is comforting (1:33)
- Palliative care for the living and the dying (0:44)
- The last word (1:10)
- Faith helps (2:07)
- Standing between the living and the dead (2:17)
- Expressing grief (1:12)
- Sharing news gently (2:57)
- Sharing bad news (4:50)
- Helping the grieving family (2:37)
- Arranging the funeral (0:59)
- Faith gives us hope (1:07)
- Expressing the pain of grief (0:51)
- Sharing sadness (1:51)
- Our caring doctor (1:20)
- Looking for comfort (2:39)
- Grief is not easy (1:02)
- Reminders are difficult (1:10)
- Everyone grieves differently (1:31)
- Living while dying (2:22)
- Learning from a loved one's life and death (1:00)
- God helped me (1:12)
- Grief can't be avoided (2:26)
- Life without my husband (1:15)
- Ethiopian voices: Ceremony, traditions and beliefs (7:37)
- Ethiopian voices: Caring for the patient and family (5:37)
- Ethiopian voices: A good death (6:01)
- Ethiopian voices: After death and grief (4:34)
- Turning to our faith (0:59)
- What is palliative care? (2:25)
- Keeping family in the dark (2:02)
- The larger family of community (1:37)
- I will be with you (3:21)
- Food: an essential ingredient (2:11)
- After-death traditions (2:09)
- It's good to talk about it (2:28)
- At home or in the hospital (2:03)
- You are not alone (1:41)
- We become their family (1:48)
- The community comes together (1:54)
- Faith is important (1:21)
- They keep it to themselves (1:19)
- Dying at home (0:49)
- Is my family's future secure? (1:45)
- Programs and services (1:26)
- Please don't cremate (1:00)
- Whatever I can do (3:07)
- Life after death (1:32)
- They don't think about themselves (2:04)
- I want to be buried back home (1:52)
- Medical care for everyone (0:49)
- Providing comfort with food (0:53)
- Filipino voices: Ceremony, traditions and beliefs (5:44)
- Filipino voices: Caring for the patient and family (5:12)
- Filipino voices: A good death (7:22)
- Filipino voices: After death and grief (4:35)
- Pampakalmang pag-aalaga? ... What is palliative care? *not sure about the title MA's moms translation: Arugang Matiwasay (1:21)
- Daddy's in a better place (1:11)
- End-of-life decisions (2:25)
- Legal documents (1:30)
- Daddy's really sick (1:26)
- Reach out (2:00)
- The cost of thoughtlessness (1:55)
- Open conversations with my spouse (1:07)
- Body and soul (0:29)
- Make memories (1:03)
- Let's work as a team (1:08)
- God forbid (2:37)
- Who is the decision maker? (2:04)
- Doing service (2:03)
- The platinum rule of respect (1:22)
- No more surgery (2:23)
- Family only (2:47)
- Breaking the news carefully (1:38)
- Your preferred language (2:16)
- When you can't speak the language (1:07)
- It's meant to be (2:19)
- It depends on where they were raised (1:25)
- What is palliative care? (1:23)
- The importance of language (1:45)
- Don't talk with Dad about this (1:51)
- Hope at the end of life (1:41)
- Talking about advanced care plans (0:49)
- Do Not Resuscitate (1:47)
- It doesn't mean giving up hope (1:44)
- Spirituality (1:20)
- A communication care plan (1:09)
- Speaking with my patients and their families (1:10)
- Ask questions (1:50)
- Who should translate? (1:52)
- Caring for family at home (1:41)
- Dying in peace (1:00)
- Overcoming fear (0:46)
- They always welcomed me (0:48)
- The funeral (0:56)
- My own end-of-life wishes (0:43)
- The importance of a will (1:29)
- His last breath (0:57)
- We don't talk about dying (0:48)
- Indian voices: Ceremony, tradition and beliefs (12:15)
- Indian Voices: Caring for the patient and family (11:15)
- Indian Voices: A good death (12:19)
- Indian voices: After death and grief (4:56)
- The gift of acceptance (2:14)
- A foreign concept (1:17)
- Death can be difficult (2:24)
- The challenge of dying at home (1:56)
- Getting through this (1:36)
- Knowing what to expect (0:48)
- Our conflicting beliefs (0:52)
- Common choices (1:13)
- The gift of Rumi (2:34)
- Experience shapes choices (0:57)
- Burial before sunset (1:57)
- Palliative care is new in my country (0:59)
- Can we still die at home? (2:39)
- Communication is key (2:48)
- Kindness is key (2:34)
- We don't speak of cancer (2:44)
- To tell others or not? (3:24)
- Fear stays with you (1:51)
- Religion and preparing for death (1:50)
- Family first (1:58)
- Kindness goes a long way (1:48)
- Lost in the new system (3:01)
- Health care in Iran and Canada (2:18)
- Understanding the system (1:16)
- Ask, ask, ask (3:00)
- Delivering the news (1:59)
- God will save me (1:16)
- Preparing to die (2:16)
- Advice for doctors (2:43)
- Beliefs and behavior (0:55)
- Cancer and stigma (1:03)
- Cancer is punishment (2:22)
- Navigating a new system (1:24)
- Iranian voices: Thoughts and experiences around death and dying (12:51)
- Iranian voices: Understanding different medical systems (4:51)
- Iranian voices: Decisions about home, hospital and palliative care (8:24)
- Iranian Voices: After death and grief (2:34)
- Afraid to die (1:52)
- It's important to prepare (3:19)
- It's OK for you to go (1:08)
- Just be present (1:42)
- Accepting death (0:48)
- Caring calmly (0:49)
- The priest is bad luck (1:09)
- The importance of religion (1:27)
- Don't talk about it (0:58)
- The Italian funeral (2:30)
- How it used to be (0:55)
- Cultural awareness (0:47)
- Grief can't be rushed (1:32)
- Caring versus curing (2:10)
- History, technology and accepting death (2:31)
- Resisting palliative care (2:50)
- When home care isn't enough (0:53)
- Accepting and planning for death (1:41)
- What is reasonable treatment? (1:37)
- Comfort care (1:29)
- A good death (2:22)
- Faith-based decisions (2:25)
- Sharing information (3:04)
- Palliative care: A new concept (1:19)
- There must be food (2:19)
- Changing expectations (1:56)
- Important conversations (2:08)
- Difficult conversations (1:57)
- Courage and suffering (2:21)
- The comfort of belief (1:44)
- A family matter (1:55)
- Those left behind (1:12)
- Don't forget hope (2:28)
- Comforting the dying (1:28)
- Human kindness (2:49)
- The importance of surroundings (1:36)
- Grieving the Italian way (1:20)
- Mind over matter (1:53)
- Angry all the time (1:33)
- Speaking the devil's name (1:18)
- Cultural expectations (1:38)
- Finding comfort (1:19)
- No regrets (1:55)
- Finding the right person (1:38)
- Running from grief (2:48)
- Letting my husband go (1:40)
- Unexpected joy (2:07)
- Italian voices: Traditions and beliefs (5:28)
- Italian voices: Caring for the patient and family (5:46)
- Italian voices: A good death (6:43)
- Italian voices: After death and grief (5:30)
- The stigma of hospice (1:36)
- What we can hope for (1:37)
- People are more open here (0:37)
- Faith keeps you strong (0:27)
- We celebrate food (0:47)
- I don't leave the house (1:04)
- Talking about death (0:59)
- Matching volunteers (1:22)
- When my father was ill (0:55)
- Daily challenges after death of a spouse (1:10)
- What are palliative care services? (2:00)
- My wife is palliative (1:46)
- Palliative care is remarkable (2:18)
- Preparing to die at home (3:35)
- Preparing for death (2:45)
- What does DNR mean? (2:12)
- Culture, religion and acceptance (1:56)
- Depression (1:23)
- There is no shame (0:30)
- The help was still there (2:31)
- Grief isn't easy (1:19)
- I will never be a mother (2:27)
- Visiting mama (2:37)
- Hospice is a good idea (1:44)
- The language is important (1:33)
- Remember the patient (0:55)
- Faith and palliative care (2:16)
- What health care staff need to know (2:24)
- Home away from home (2:42)
- Build them up (0:49)
- Planning for end of life (1:33)
- Life after death (2:25)
- Why me? (1:02)
- Talking about death: the etiquette (3:13)
- My own faith (1:11)
- From Allah we come and to Allah we return (1:09)
- Rituals after death (3:16)
- Helping the loved one on their way (0:48)
- Culture and faith (2:11)
- Time to mourn (0:50)
- Helping someone grieve (3:07)
- Pakistani voices: Traditions and beliefs (9:31)
- Pakistani voices: Looking after the patient and family (7:25)
- Pakistani voices: A good death (7:21)
- Pakistani voices: After death and grief (8:36)
- What health care providers should know (1:44)
- Failing a dying parent (1:32)
- Taboo topics (1:44)
- Culture, religion and illness (2:44)
- Learning about hospice care (1:19)
- Open the door (1:07)
- The blessing of sharing (0:49)
- Religious rituals (0:47)
- Talking about cancer is taboo (2:14)
- Shame and drama (1:24)
- Speak clearly and simply (1:42)
- Cancer: A big frightening word (1:47)
- We care for our elders at home (1:27)
- Does he think I'm three years old? (2:55)
- Only God knows (2:06)
- A family history (2:23)
- A day at a time (2:16)
- No technology, no morphine (1:44)
- Tell the family first (1:48)
- Dignity at home (0:54)
- Writing a will (1:03)
- What is a DNR? (1:33)
- Someone to talk to (1:06)
- The whole community at the hospital (1:30)
- Civil war and cancer (1:37)
- Palliative care can happen at home (2:34)
- Somali voices: Ceremony, traditions and beliefs (7:42)
- Somali voices: Caring for the patient and family (4:26)
- Somali voices: A good death (5:32)
- Somali voices: After death and grief (2:22)
- Differences between religion and culture (1:59)

