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End-of-Life Care calls for papers / meetings & conferences

4 calls for papers / meetings & conferences listed in End-of-Life Care 

Call for Specialty Workshops: Association for Death Education and Counseling 36th Annual Conference
United States
Maryland
07/17/2013

Call for Specialty Workshops: Association for Death Education and Counseling 36th Annual Conference

Riding the Dragon: End of Life and Grief as a Path to Resilience, Transformation and Compassion

April 23–26, 2014 Pre-Conference Institute: April 22–23, 2014 Baltimore, Maryland

Call for Specialty Workshops Closes: July 17, 2013

Death and bereavement are profoundly life-altering and may be likened to a great and mysterious hero’s journey. The path of grief is often dark and ominous, when suddenly,
in the words of author Julia Cameron, “rising from the mists and rolling fog of our not knowing,” the hero (griever) comes face to face with a dragon. According to a Chinese proverb, “If he ignores the dragon, it will eat him. If he tries to confront the dragon it will overpower him. But if he rides the dragon, he will take advantage of its might and power.” Therein lies the potential for resilience, transformation and compassion. At this year’s conference, participants will deepen their appreciation for the dark night of the soul and the great gifts that can emerge when, rather than being defeated, the bereaved find the strength and courage to ride the dragon.

Specialty Workshops April 22–23, 2014

Specialty Workshops are topic-specific training opportunities for professionals to enhance their skills and knowledge about dying, death and bereavement. Specialty Workshops are either a half-day (3.25 hours) or full-day (6.5 hours) long..

About ADEC:

The Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC), founded in 1976, is the oldest interdisciplinary organization in the field of dying, death and bereavement. The membership comprises educators, counselors, nurses, physicians, hospital and hospice personnel, mental health professionals, clergy, funeral directors, social workers, philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, physical and recreational therapists, and wellbeing specialists. ADEC’s goal is to enhance the ability of professionals to meet the needs of those with whom they work in death education and grief counseling.

Questions?

Contact ADEC Headquarters at:

ADEC Headquarters
111 Deer Lake Road, Suite 100
Deerfield, IL 60015 USA
Phone:+1- 847-509-0403
Fax: +1-847-480-9282
E-mail: adec@adec.org

Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Physician Researcher, Psychologist, Social Worker
Call for Concurrent Session and Poster Submissions: Association for Death Education and Counseling 36thAnnual Conference
United States
Maryland
09/10/2013

Call for Concurrent Session and Poster Submissions: Association for Death Education and Counseling 36thAnnual Conference

Riding the Dragon: End of Life and Grief as a Path to Resilience, Transformation and Compassion

April 23–26, 2014 Pre-Conference Institute: April 22–23, 2014 Baltimore, Maryland

Call for Concurrent Session and Poster Submissions Closes: September 10, 2013

Death and bereavement are profoundly life-altering and may be likened to a great and mysterious hero’s journey. The path of grief is often dark and ominous, when suddenly,
in the words of author Julia Cameron, “rising from the mists and rolling fog of our not knowing,” the hero (griever) comes face to face with a dragon. According to a Chinese proverb, “If he ignores the dragon, it will eat him. If he tries to confront the dragon it will overpower him. But if he rides the dragon, he will take advantage of its might and power.” Therein lies the potential for resilience, transformation and compassion. At this year’s conference, participants will deepen their appreciation for the dark night of the soul and the great gifts that can emerge when, rather than being defeated, the bereaved find the strength and courage to ride the dragon.

Concurrent Session and Poster Presentations April 24–26, 2014

Submissions are proposals for oral presentations during the concurrent sessions (either 30, 60 or 90 minutes long) or for poster presentations.

About ADEC:

The Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC), founded in 1976, is the oldest interdisciplinary organization in the field of dying, death and bereavement. The membership comprises educators, counselors, nurses, physicians, hospital and hospice personnel, mental health professionals, clergy, funeral directors, social workers, philosophers, psychologists, sociologists, physical and recreational therapists, and wellbeing specialists. ADEC’s goal is to enhance the ability of professionals to meet the needs of those with whom they work in death education and grief counseling.

Questions?

Contact ADEC Headquarters at:

ADEC Headquarters
111 Deer Lake Road, Suite 100
Deerfield, IL 60015 USA
Phone:+1- 847-509-0403
Fax: +1-847-480-9282
E-mail: adec@adec.org

Hospice Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Philosopher, Physician Researcher, Psychologist, Social Worker
Call for Abstracts: 43rd Critical Care Congress
United States
California
09/03/2013

Call for Abstracts: 43rd Critical Care Congress

January 9-13, 2014 San Francisco, California

The Society of Critical Care Medicine’s 43rd Critical Care Congress will be a powerhouse of creative and inspirational ideas for the critical care field.

We invite you to join nearly 5,000 critical care clinicians in San Francisco, where innovation will meet at the intersection of technology and medicine. Novel discoveries will be showcased, culminating a year’s worth of achievements in research and education.

The 2014 Congress will provide outstanding networking opportunities and innovative learning experiences, highlighting the most up-to-date, evidence-based developments in critical care medicine.

Make your contribution to the advancement of critical care by submitting your original investigative research and case reports for the 43rd Critical Care Congress. If accepted, your work will be on display throughout Congress, which will be held January 9 to 13, 2014. Abstracts also will be published in Critical Care Medicine, the #1 critical care subspecialty journal. Individuals whose abstracts are accepted are also eligible for peer evaluation and awards. Presenting authors who are SCCM members at the time of abstract submission may have an opportunity to apply for complimentary Congress registration.

Abstract Submission

To submit an abstract for the 43rd Critical Care Congress, log in to MySCCM.org with your SCCM customer ID and password, or sign up for an account. Once logged in, click the “Submit Abstracts” button to the left.

Abstracts will be accepted from May 1, 2013, to 12:00 p.m. Central Time on September 3, 2013. No extensions or late-breaking abstracts will be permitted. Please note that the SCCM office will be closed for the Labor Day holiday on September 2, 2013; no technical assistance will be available on that date. It is recommended that you complete the submission process prior to September 3, 2013.

Submission Requirements

Abstracts and/or information previously presented or published within the United States or internationally are not allowed.

Abstracts may contain new research on a topic presented previously.

Submission of an abstract constitutes a commitment by the author(s) to present the abstract as accepted.

Expenses associated with the preparation, submission and presentation of an abstract are the responsibility of the presenter(s)/author(s).

Authors of accepted abstracts are expected to register for the meeting and pay the meeting registration fee, unless they qualify and apply for complimentary registration.

Abstract Categories

Administration

Basic Science

- Cell Biology (NO and Signal Transduction, Signal Transduction)

- Cardiovascular

- Endocrine

- GI/Nutrition

- Hematology

- Hepatic

- Immunology

- Infection

- Neurology

- Pulmonary

- Renal

- Sepsis

Case Reports (including but not limited to disaster-related cases)

Clinical Medicine

- Cardiovascular (Diagnostics, Monitoring, Therapeutic)

- Endocrine

- GI/Nutrition

- Hematology

- Immunology

- Infection

- Neurology (Diagnostics, Monitoring, Therapeutics)

- Pulmonary (Diagnostics, Mechanical Ventilation, Therapeutics)

- Renal

- Burns/Trauma (Therapeutics: Pharmacologic/Procedural)

- Sepsis (Diagnostics, Therapeutics, Antimicrobials, Guidelines and Bundles,

Nosocomial (VAP, BSI, UTI), Cardiovascular, Endocrine)

CPR/Resuscitation

Education

Epidemiology/Outcomes (Predictors, Quality of Life, Safety)

Ethics and End of Life

Patient and Family Support

Therapeutics (Drugs and Pharmacokinetics, Sedation, Other)

Bioethicist, Critical Care Physician, Epidemiologist, Ethicist, Hematologist, Hepatologist, Hospitalist, Immunologist, Intensivist, Neurologist, Physician Researcher, Pulmonologist
Call for Papers: 10th Global Conference--Making Sense of Dying and Death
Greece
06/14/2013

Call for Papers: 10th Global Conference--Making Sense of Dying and Death

Thursday 7th November 2013 – Saturday 9th November 2013 Athens, Greece

This inter- and multi-disciplinary conference explores dying and death and the ways culture impacts care for the dying, the overall experience of dying, and ways the dead are remembered. Over the past three decades, scholarship in thanatology has increased dramatically. This particular conference seeks a broad array of perspectives that explore, analyze, and/or interpret the myriad interrelations and interactions that exist between death and culture. Culture not only presents and portrays ideas about “a good death” and norms that seek to achieve it, culture also operates as both a vehicle and medium through which meaning about death is communicated and understood. Sadly, too, culture sometimes facilitates death through violence.

Given the location of this year’s conference, a central theme in our proceedings (augmenting those listed below) will involve tracing the on-going and profound shift in contemporary attitudes toward death. In ancient Greece, for example, citizens learned about death and dying through intimate, hands-on experiences. Indeed, the same was true for most people throughout the world until the mid-20th century. Today, many people around the world maintain an increasingly passive role in caring for the dying, and supporting those who grieve a loss. Given that death, serving the dying, and caring for the bereaved has always been such an essential and unavoidable feature of life in traditional societies, a key emphasis in this year’s conference will involve an exploration of the connections between contemporary technologies, social media hubs, and modern health care delivery systems and the ways they impact current end-of-life issues and decisions, including the experience of bereavement and grief. This conference welcomes submissions that specifically assess how these factors are altering our contemporary attitudes toward death, and how patients, staff, and survivors intersect amidst newly emerging care settings and sites of memorialization.

We also welcome submissions that produce conversations engaging historical, ethnographic, normative, literary, anthropological, philosophical, artistic, political or other terms that elaborate a relationship between death and culture.

Papers, reports, presentations, workshops and pre-formed panels are invited on issues on or broadly related to any of the following themes:

1: Health Care Systems: Patients, Staff, and Institutions

Modern Health Care Delivery Systems and Care for the Dying

Palliative Care

Hospice

Elder Care/Ageing in Place Models

Trauma and Emergency Care

Nursing Homes/Skilled Facilities/Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly (RCFEs)/Assisted Living

Clinical Competencies in Pain Management and Symptom Control

Measurements, Incentives, Regulatory Statutes, and Recommendations

Continuity of Care Across Treatment Settings

Interdisciplinary Care

2: The Caregiver-Patient Relationship

Caregiver’s (Physician’s?) Obligations and Virtues

Medical Paternalism and Respect for the Patient, Autonomy

Truth-Telling

Informed Consent

Medicine in the West for a Multicultural Society

Contested Therapies Within the Physician-Patient Relationship

Conflicts of Interest; Problems of Conscience

Caregiver Stress/Caregiver Burnout/Compassion Fatigue

Being With Someone Who Is Dying

Assessment Challenges/Barriers

3: End-of-Life Issues and Decisions

Defining Death

Organ Transplantation and Organ Donation

The Interplay of Ethical Meta-Principles at the End of Life

Nonmaleficence

Beneficence

Autonomy

Death Anxiety

Choosing Death

Advance Directives/Advance Planning/Physician Order for Life-Sustaining Treatments (POLST)/Do Not Resuscitate

Considering End-of-Life Issues and Decisions and Legislation

4: Relationships Between Death and Culture:

internet/social media

music

literature

film

broadcast media

religious broadcasting

journalism

athletics

comic books

novels / poetry / short story

television

radio

print media

technology

popular art / architecture

sacred vs. profane space

advertising

consumerism

Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 14th June 2013 If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a full draft paper should be submitted by Friday 13th September 2013

What to Send

300 word abstracts should be submitted to the Organising Chairs; abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats, following this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract, e) body of abstract, f) up to 10 keywords
E-mails should be entitled: DD10 Abstract Submission

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as bold, italics or underline). We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Organising Chairs

Nate Hinerman

Rob Fisher: dd10@inter-disciplinary.net

The conference is part of the Making Sense Of: series of research projects, which in turn belong to the Probing the Boundaries programmes of Inter-Disciplinary.Net. It aims to bring together people from different areas and interests to share ideas and explore discussions which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference are eligible for publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into a themed ISBN hard copy volume.

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel or subsistence.

Bioethicist, Ethicist, Health Services Researcher, Hospice Nurse, Nurse, Nurse Researcher, Philosopher, Physician, Physician Researcher, Social Worker