Description
In Dying Green, award-winning educator Christine Vatovec offers an engaging study that asks us to consider the broader environmental sustainability of health care. Through a comparative analysis of the care provided to terminally ill patients in a conventional cancer ward, a palliative care unit, and an acute-care hospice facility, she shows how decisions made at a patient's bedside govern the environmental footprint of the healthcare industry. Likewise, Dying Green offers insights on the many opportunities that exist for reducing the ecological impacts of medical practices in general, while also enhancing care for the dying in particular. By envisioning a more sustainable approach to care, this book offers a way forward that is better for both patients and the planet.
About the Author
CHRISTINE VATOVEC is a research assistant professor at the University of Vermont, an award-winning lecturer, and a fellow at the Gund Institute for Environment.
Reviews
"Dying Green has the potential to break through the superficial "greening of hospitals" mindset and to address deeper levels of the relationship between health and sustainability. Vatovec has a strong understanding of sustainability and resources."
- Tee L. Guidotti, author of Health and Sustainability: An Introduction"This remarkable book covers a lot of ground, and does it with rigor, compassion, and humanity. Dying Green will get you to think not just about the greening of health care, but also about how you want to handle the eventual end of your own life-you will want to read this book."- Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature
Book Information
ISBN 9781978832114
Author Christine Vatovec
Format Hardback
Page Count 186
Imprint Rutgers University Press
Publisher Rutgers University Press
Weight(grams) 64g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 18mm