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The iNTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIVE WEBINAR SERIES

Presented in collaboration with the EAPC Task Force on Care for the Dying, the quarterly International Collaborative Webinar Series is aimed at health and social care professionals who provide care for dying people, as well as those members of the public who are interested in the societal issues around death and dying in the 21st century.

The Webinar series aims to:

  • raise awareness of the work of the International Collaborative

  • explore pertinent topics related to best care for the dying person

  • share evidence-based methods to improve care for the dying

  • explore societal issues relating to death and dying

Webinars are recorded and made available online for a period of three months post-event. 

Full Members of the Collaborative can access our full archive here.  

UPCOMING WEBINARS - REGISTER TODAY

LATEST WEBINAR - FREE TO VIEW

28/11/2024:     Don't forget the children when a parent is dying of cancer

  • Equipping health and social care professionals to support families when a parent is dying with cancer

WEBINAR ARCHIVE - AVAILABLE TO FULL MEMBERS ONLY

Our webinar archive contains the full programme of recordings dating back to the start of the webinar series in 2021.  It is intended for use by our Full Members as a training and education resource. 

Webinars are listed below for information only.  To view the recordings, Full Members should visit the archive page.

 

If you are not currently a Full Member but would like to access to the webinar archive, please visit the Full Membership page for information on how to join.

17/06/2021:     Can We Demystify Dying?

  • Recognising dying

  • Groundbreaking potential prognosticators

  • Preventing death rattle

17/11/2021:     Improving Practice: Why end of life care research matters

  • Core outcomes in care for the dying

  • Living well, dying well: the iLIVE project

  • End of life care during the COVID19 pandemic

31/03/2022:     Is Advance Care Planning worth advancing?

  • Following the Science: The lessons of Advance Care Planning

  • Shifting to Serious Illness Communication

08/09/2022:     Dying in the Digital Age: Are you prepared? 

  • Navigating the business of death online: planning for and managing our digital remains, assets and memorialisation

  • Death and dying in the Metaverse - what can we expect?  

08/12/2022:     Global Challenges for Opioid Use in Care for the Dying Person 

  • Is having access to end of life anticipatory medications in the home reassuring and helpful? 

  • Lack of access to opioids globally is a barrier to optimal palliative care 

30/03/2023:     Families' perceptions of how we care for their dying relatives 

  • What can we learn from the voices of bereaved relatives? 

08/06/2023:     How to assess palliative care needs: should we be taking a more                                     creative approach?  

  • Making a difference by assessing people with palliative care needs using SPICT

  • Palliative paramedicine: challenging perceptions, building paramedic capacity and embracing integrated models of care

07/09/2023:     Is a good death achievable?

  • The art of dying well

  • The SWAN end of life & bereavement care model

07/12/2023:     Facing life's end: understanding death anxiety and spiritual wellbeing

  • The big trip: how psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy may alleviate existential distress at end of life

  • Self-assessment in spiritual care: a case study of an empty room

14/03/2024:     The role of volunteers at the end of life:

                         The results of the EU Horizon 2020 iLIVE Project

  • The development, implementation, and evaluation of an international training programme for hospital pallaitive care volunteers in five countries

06/06/2024:     Care for the dying person with Motor Neurone Disease

  • Neuropalliative Care: the intersection between the neurologist and the palliative care team with a focus on Motor Neurone Disease

05/09/2024:     Experiences and preferences of people in the last phase of life: results from

                         the 11-country iLIVE Project

  • Recruitment, follow up and survival in an 11-country cohort study of patients at the end of life and their relatives

  • Preferences and concerns of patients in the last phase of life in 11 countries

  • How do patients with a life-limiting disease deal iwth temporality? An international qualitative study

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