Title: American Attitudes Towards Death and Dying
1American Attitudes Towards Death and Dying
- Dusana Rybarova
- Psyc 456
- July 2007
2From Visible to Invisible Death
- Visible death
- Death recognized and orchestrated by the dying
person, preparing for dying - Manual for a dying person Ars moriendi to
achieve peaceful and graceful death (dying and
funeral as public rituals with personal
assistance of close ones, forgiveness,
meditation) - Filtered death in Early America
- Between 1600 and 1830
- Funeral processions, awareness of death
- Postmortem photography publically displayed
- Increased value in family relationship shifted
the initiatives surrounding death from the dying
person to the family - Shift from personal psychological event to
collective sociocultural event
3From Visible to Invisible Death
- Invisible Death
- Current funeral practices adopted by European
Americans - Feelings and thoughts are kept private
- health and funeral institutions dominate the
procedures surrounding death - Thanatology
- Interdisciplinary study of death and dying
- Established in the wake of WW II
- Has roots in psychology, sociology, anthropology,
philosophy, theology, biology, medicine, social
work, ethics, law and other disciplines
4John D. Morgan Canadian philosopher and
thanatologist
- Our North American death system, is the result
of our limited exposure, which is a result of our
high life expectancy, but in many ways, our
life is no different from that of the peasant in
the 14th century. The peasant missed a fully
human life because he or she was inundated with
death. We do not live fully because we reject
death. - (199540-42)
5Factors influencing invisible death
- Industrialization
- Increased living standards
- food production, better housing, expanding public
education, improving water and sewage facilities,
new communication and transportation means - Modern medicine
- New medical technologies, immunization programs,
sterile treatment facilities, hospitals - deaths in US. Hospitals (1900 20, 1994
80) - Life expectancy and the family
- After WWII life expectancy increased by 20 years
- Infant mortality decreased from 29.2 per 1000
live births in 1950 to 8.2 in 1992 - We view death as an event that happens in old age
6Factors influencing invisible death
- Geographic Mobility
- Distance often separates family and friends as
changes in employment and lifestyle require
moving (decline in personal contact with extended
family) - Death and Language
- Approach avoidance conflict
- Obsessive fascination with death in literature,
TV, film, humor - Obsessed not to speak about death directly (using
the word death more often when we are not
speaking about death than when we are
7Factors influencing invisible death
- Death and the Media
- Death is abstract and superficially portrayed
- Death is fun and revocable
- Cartoon characters
- Death is brutal but fast
- Death is resolved in 60-90 minutes
- Death is horrible but distant
- Happens to people other than us
8Attitudes of Invisible Death
- Attitudes
- Relatively lasting patterns of thinking, feeling
and behaving towards something - Cognitive Denial
- We refuse to think about death or perceive death
related issues - One of the most common and most indirect defense
mechanisms - Short-term denial
- Natural coping mechanism right after a traumatic
event - Prepares us for grieving and processing of the
loss - Long-term denial
- Represses emotions that are too painful
- Destructive in the long run (immune system, heart
problems etc.) - Deathbed denial
- A form of cognitive denial
- Descriptions of deathbed scenes (Kastenbaum
Normand, 1990) - Majority of respondents expected to die at home
- Almost all expected to be alert, lucid, and aware
right up to the moment of death - Surrounded by loving, supporting, even cheerful
loved ones
9Attitudes of Invisible Death
- Emotional repression
- Blocks disturbing wishes, thoughts, or
experiences from conscious awareness - In relation to death we block out unacceptable
bodily feelings and emotions painfully connected
to death or loss - Respondents describing their death did not report
any pain, anxiety, fear, sadness etc. - Emotional repression and cognitive denial of
death have become necessary in chaotic modern
society in order for individuals to maintain the
illusion of normal life (Jasnow, 1985)
10Attitudes of Invisible Death
- Behavioral passivity
- We became passive observers to our own dying and
to the morning we leave the behavioral
orchestration to physicians and funeral directors - Socialization
- We are socialized to conform others
- Conformity
- High conformity in situations poorly defined
- Lack of social support for non-conforming
behavior - Lack of social comparison
- When personally dealing with death we may feel
isolated - Perception of legitimate authority
- Authority figures funeral directors,
physicians, nurses, clergy - Inaccessibility of values
- When we are distressed by the sadness, despair,
and pain of death we dont see that cognitive
denial, emotional repression and behavioral
passivity are wrong attitudes
11Ethnic variations in attitudes towards death
- Affrican American attitudes (12 of population)
- Life after death immortality is a given for most
- During grief family is more less important than
for Asian Americans and Hispanic Americans - Expect to live much longer than other ethnic
groups - Preference of care for terminally ill at home
- Less formal and more emotional than European
Americans - Hispanic American attitudes (9 of population)
- More open expression of emotions after death
- More visits to the cemetery and more
participation in the burial rituals - Strong support of family, less likely to disclose
terminal diagnosis to a dying person - Christian Hispanics death viewed as a
beginning, a door passing from one state to
another
12Ethnic variations in attitudes towards death
- Asian American attitudes
- Marked by tightly controlled communication
- Chinese Americans death as a taboo subject in
general - Japanese Americans often hard to detect when
the members are in distress and dying - Belief in the deceased watching over those who
remain alive - Restraining themselves from public displays of
grief and conservative mourning traditions - Hawaiian visions of the dead
13Ethnic variations in attitudes towards death
- Native American attitudes
- Great variability in attitudes towards death
across American Indian tribes - Apache
- Dead persons body regarded as an empty shell
- Lakota (Sioux)
- Death as a natural counterpart of life the soul
journeys to the Spirit Land - Reverence for the body residence of the
persons essence - Unrestrained grief is appropriate for both men
and women - Navajo
- do not believe in afterlife
- Preference of death at the hospital to prevent
home pollution - Focus on positive aspects and avoidance of
negativity including discussions of negative
medical outcomes - Death is often forecast by unusual spiritual or
physical events, whi are understood to be natural
and in the order of thigs
14Death, Dying and Acculturation
- Vast variability across cultures
- Ethnic differences posing questions for hospital
care - Hmong Americans refusing some medical practices
because of traditional beliefs of spirits
residing in body - Need for more information and respect for
traditional views - Modifications of traditional views within
different ethnic groups in North American society - Acculturations towards the views of the European
American tradition - Acculturated Korean Americans and Mexican
Americans are more likely to tell a loved one the
truth about a terminal prognosis than those not
acculturated
15Final issues
- Is America a Death-Denying Culture?
- Are we a death-denying, death-avoiding society,
or do we reveal a complex mixture of positive and
negative attitudes towards death, dying and the
mourning after? - Changing Attitudes and Death Education
- Field of thanatology established in 1950s
- The Journal of Thanatology
- Death studies
- Increased interest in death in 1960s and 70s
- Death-education movement
- Death is becoming more human dying is become more
humane
16Herman Feifel editor of the book The meaning of
Death seminal work bringing death and dying
to the American scholarly community
- the death-education movement has been a major
force in broadening our grasp of the
phenomenology of illness, in helping humanize
medical relationships and health care, and in
advancing the rights of the dying Furthermore,
it is contributing to reconstituting the
integrity of our splintered wholenesssensitizing
us to our common humanity I believe that how we
regard and how treat the dying and survivors are
prime indications of a civilizations intention
and target In emphasizing awareness of death, we
sharpen and intensify our appreciation of the
uniqueness and preciousness of life. - From Herman Feifels Distinguished
Professional Contribution Award address at the
1988 annual convention of the American
Psychological Association