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death is a great equalizer .do you agree ? present your arguments in a short paragraph + 1 English​

Answers

Answered by Sabertron
4

Answer:

Despite such eloquent claims about the inevitability and universality

of death, it is not an egalitarian transition. At what age and of what

causes a person dies are tightly tied to social, economic, and geographic

(dis)advantages over the life course.

Researchers have only recently started to investigate disparities in the

quality of dying among older adults. According to bioethicists, death

quality encompasses many dimensions, such as whether the dying person takes their last breath at home surrounded by family and friends or

alone in a hospital room. Death quality also reflects whether those final

days are marked by pain versus comfort, medical care that matches

rather than betrays the wishes of the dying, autonomy versus acquiescence in end-of-life decision-making, and family cooperation versus

conflict. This chapter provides a historical sketch of death and dying in

the United States and suggests reasons why inequalities in older adults’

dying experiences are a uniquely contemporary phenomenon. I describe

the core components of good versus bad deaths and show the complex

ways in which these experiences are linked to markers of social inequality and public policies, especially Medicare reimbursement practices.

I also argue that while death is inevitable, a bad death is not—even

for older adults whose lives have been marked by persistent disadvantage. I describe strategies and policies that may help older adults die

peacefully and on their own terms. These strategies include advance

care planning (ACP) and other tools, like physician orders for lifesustaining treatment (POLSTS), that convey a patient’s preferences to

both loved ones and health care professionals. ACP is available to all

adults, in theory, yet in practice these tools are used far less often by

African Americans, the poor, and socially isolated older adults than by

whites, the wealthy, and socially integrated older adults.3

This lack of

ACP, in turn, renders patients less likely to receive treatments they want

and more likely to receive futile, costly, and uncomfortable treatments

they had hoped to avoid.

Answered by rajagrewal768
0

Answer:

Death is an omnipotent force that is inevitable and looming. For this_reason, it is often_referred to as_the "Great Equalizer. Behind this designation is death inequality as a culturally constructed process affected by social power relationships. A good example in this regard is the relationship between American African Americans and death.

Explanation:

According to Frederick Douglass's published autobiography (1845), the social repression of Africans in the United States has been scrutinized since the beginning of American slavery, a "unique institution.  The results show that the United States lacks an aspect of African-American culture that is unaffected by the history of racism and prejudice. The experience of death is no exception.

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