Therese Brady Library Newsletter Vol 1 Is 3

Page 1

Thérèse Brady Library News

Vol 1 Is3 – M a rch/Apr i l 2010 .................................................1 Library news & updates Short Title of Article Three.......2 Short

itle of Article Four

In this issue; •

Library news

Resource & trial updates

Conference dates

Article overview

Review

3

Bereavement bibliotherapy booklet update The library launched a bereavement bibliotherapy booklet on March 9th with an open evening attended by librarians and members of the bereavement support community. Maria Costello spoke about her work as Bereavement Care Liaison officer in the midlands and the benefits of supportive reading material for the recently bereaved was highlighted. Copies of the bibliotherapy booklet have been distributed to hospital and public libraries, hospices and bereavement groups around the country with the aim of highlighting the Therese Brady library’s public loan service and to provide a ready reference of useful

New titles list Click to view new titles

titles and resources for bereaved people and those who support them. Due to the overwhelming demand for the booklet print copies are no longer available, however an electronic copy can be downloaded HERE. Pictures of the launch evening can be seen on the Hospice Foundation’s Flickr page. A short feature on the bereavement bibliotherapy booklet and the services of the Therese

Brady library appears in the April edition of Irish Library News , the newsletter of the Library Council of Ireland.

L ibrary training sessions A reminder to all that library training sessions take place on the last Monday of each month. The last session; ‘an introduction to Web 2.0’ covered blogs, Twitter and social media integration. The next session will take place on May 31st and will look at using the internet for research. Anyone who missed the last session and would like a repeat email laura.rooneyferris@hospice­foundation.ie to schadule a session

1


Thérèse Brady Library News –Vol. 1 Is. 3 March/April 2010

Resource Updates Last chance Trial access to Social Science Index and Health Business Full text has been extended until May 10th. Please make sure you take advantage of the additional trial access to these databases and their extensive range of full text coverage. Access on site is automatic via IP recognition and password details for off site access are available from the library. Assistence in navigating the search interface is also available from the library. As always feedback on trial resources is encouraged.

Resource news, trials

Grief Matters: Now available via ADEC The library’s ADEC subscription now includes access to ‘Grief Matters: The Australian Journal of Grief and Bereavement’. PDF full text coverage is available back to its first issue in 1998. Login through the members only section at www.adec.org username and password details are available from the library.

and updates

Library DVD & Video collection

Don’t forget that in addition to the obvious (books and journals), the library also houses a video and DVD collection. Video and DVD titles can be browsed on the library catalogue by selecting ‘video’ or ‘DVD’ in the media field. Titles include educational and training material as well as an increasing collection of films with death, illness or bereavement as central themes. Some recent DVD acquisitions include; • The Seventh Seal (see review on page 4) • Ordinary People • In America • Moonlight Mile • The Bucket List

Conferences and dates for May •

May 19th – End­of­life care; from the margins to the mainstream

This multidisciplinary conference addressing end­of­life issues organised by Hospice Friendly Hospitals takes place in Clontarf Castle and includes the launch of the new ‘Quality Standards for End­of­life care in Hospitals’. Full programme and further details are available HERE •

May 19th ­ End of Life Communication and Care after Death

Our lady’s Hospice – further details available at www.olh.ie •

May 21st – A comfortable death? The doctors dilemma

Draycott (Nursing) Education Centre, 100 Sydney Street, London 2


Bereavememt ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

Article overviews Block et al in the March issue of Journal of pain and symptom management examine the benefit of hospice volunteers on bereaved families. Their article, ‘Got Volunteers? Association of Hospice Use of Volunteers With Bereaved Family Members' Overall Rating of the Quality of End­of­ Life Care’ indicated a higher perception of quality from bereaved families for hospices employing bereavement volunteers. Hospice volunteers were also the focus of an article in the March volume of American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Care. Claxton­Oldfield and Banzen’s article ‘Personality characteristics of hospice palliative care volunteers; the ‘big five’ and empathy’ measured hospice volunteer’s personality characteristics against empathy indicators. In ‘Parenting after the death of a spouse’ the issue of spousal bereavement is addressed in relation to its impact on parenting and family dynamics. Glazer et al’s article in the April volume of the American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Care examines six individuals following the loss of a spouse identifying five key themes as emerging in the post bereavement parental role.

Thérèse Brady Library News ­ Vol. 1 Is. 3 March/April 2010

Hospice & palliative care March saw the establishment of the first Italian national palliative care service implemented following approval by the Italian parliament. Closer to home the launch on March 24th of the National policy ‘ Palliative Care For Children With Life­Limiting Conditions In Ireland’ placed emphasis on the palliative care needs of paediatric patients. The March issue of Archives of pediatrics and adolescent medicine features an article by Zelcer et al ‘Palliative care of children with brain tumors: a parental perspective’ which takes the viewpoint of parents whose children are nearing the end­of­life

Reviews

and addresses specific demands placed on palliative

An overview of selected articles

care teams in providing support for both children and

and publications in

their families in the final stages of their illness.

bereavement

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

palliative care, hospice and end of

End­of­Life Issues

life care research

Advance care directives and the difficulty of making

­All featured

end­of­life care decisions for incapacitated loved

articles are

ones was addressed in Silviera et al’s article

available on

‘Advance Directives and Outcomes of Surrogate

request from the

Decision Making before Death’ from the April 1

Therese Brady

st

Library

edition of the New England Journal of Medicine. It indicates that patients at end­of­life are most likely to require assistance with decision making, indicating the benefit of advance care directives. Lakarani­Fard et al’s article in the April issue of the Journal of pain & symptom management; ‘Feasibility of Discussing End­of­Life Care Goals with Inpatients

Using a Structured, Conversational Approach: The Go Wish Card Game’ presents a structured format for outlining end­of­life wishes. 3


Thérèse Brady Library News ­Vol. 1 Is. 3 March/April 2010

Review – DVD

Palliative care for all ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­

End stage renal failure patients’ and their symptom burden are examined in Sara

‘The seventh seal’

Davison’s article ‘Impact of Pain and

By; Ingmar Bergman (1957)

Symptom Burden on the Health­Related Quality of Life of Hemodialysis Patients’ in the March issue (Vol 39 Is 3) of Journal of pain and symptom management. This issue

also features an article by Gysels et al

"When he broke open the seventh seal, there was silence in heaven…” with this line from Revelations (Rev 8:1)Ingmar Bergman begins his classic rumination on mortality and death. This foreboding opening coupled with stark imagery from the outset might act as a ‘turn back now’ sign for anyone looking for something to relax with over a glass of wine and some popcorn.

entitled ‘The Experience of Breathlessness:

‘The Seventh Seal’ follows Knight Antonius Block (Max von Sydow) and his squire

The Social Course of Chronic Obstructive

Jons on their return from the crusades to a plague infested Sweden. The film takes the

Pulmonary Disease’

form of medieval allegory with Block confronted on his return by the personification of

This article examines the treatment of

Death himself. In a scene familiar from numerous parodies (it is referenced in Woody

breathlessness in end of life care for COPD

Allen’s ‘Love & Death’, ‘Bill & Teds Bogus journey’ and even ‘Family Guy’) Death

patients outlining the increasing extension of

challenges Block to a game of chess, the outcome of which is a fait accompli; Death

e

palliative care to COPD patients and arguing that COPD patients may not require a specific adapted model for palliative care.

has come for Block. In Antonius Block we have the archetypal existential protagonist. As he moves across the Swedish countryside towards his home, the wife he left behind ten years ago and ultimately his final date with death he struggles to take meaning from his life, the

decisions he has made and he wrestles with his faith. Confronted with his imminent death Block implores God’s intervention and scorns his elusiveness in equal measure. The films overt questioning of the place of God in a world of suffering and impending death earned it a place on the Vatican film list. Despite its cerebral themes and reputation as an ‘art film’ this is not a film which

Compiled by; Laura Rooney Ferris

should be reserved exclusively for the cinephile. Blocks fear in the face of death, his

Information & Library Manager

quest to extract meaning from his life and ultimately the sense that his life’s meaning is

Thérèse Brady Library

gained only in simple acts of kindness (the meal he shares with the family of travelling

Irish Hospice Foundation

actors) and small gestures of sacrifice which give ‘The seventh seal’ universal appeal

Follow us on;

and certainly place it firmly on the list of films to watch before you die.

4

[Your Company Name Here]

Page 1


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.