The Golden Thread

Making Healthcare Decisions in Neighborhoods

by M. Margaret McDonnell RSCJ


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Softcover
$17.95
E-Book
$5.95
Softcover
$17.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 16/02/2022

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 142
ISBN : 9781982278748
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 142
ISBN : 9781982278755

About the Book

This book can be used when making difficult healthcare decisions at home with no available guidance. It is also used if ones financial situation is such that a family is concerned about not being able to afford some or all care being offered. In such situations this book helps patients, families, neighbors, gather together as they make difficult decisions right in their homes. A very particular decision process is used. If the suggested process does not accommodate the decision to be made, other processes are included in the Appendix. By enabling the gathering of people at such times we can help patients make these serious decisions in their own home environment. Do they or do they not want the proposed surgery, for example? If a particular procedure would sustain life when without it one's life would be in jeopardy, what should a person do? Making these decisions in the home instead of a hospital or other institutional environment allows a patient to engage in what becomes a life review, but with family and/or neighbor-support. A patient's final decision is rooted in their cherished values. The process leads to a deeply discerned and sound treatment decision.


About the Author

M. Margaret McDonnell, RSCJ founded The Center for Ethics and Advocacy in Illinois in 1995. A Certified Nurse Practitioner in Community Health, she worked in Boston’s neighborhood health centers, providing adult patient care. Later she obtained a Master's degree in Theology with a concentration in Ethics. After spending six years in Corporate Health Care her journey led her to founding The Center for Ethics and Advocacy in Healthcare in a North Chicago suburb. This, her main life’s work, was strong in neighborhood healthcare ethics, focused most commonly on end of life issues.