A brief history of death and dying - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 05:21 AM | Calgary | 0.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Health

A brief history of death and dying

Better sanitation, medical breakthroughs and hospitals have led to people living longer and dying alone.

From a social event to dying in hospitals to dying at home

The online series A Good Deathis a CBC News co-production with students from theGraduate Program in Journalism at Western. | MORE

A hundred years ago, a typical Canadian died at home from an infectious disease.The demise was usually swift, and the patient of any age from newborn to senior citizen.In the 1920s, for example, 10per cent of infants died before their first birthday.

"Disease was part of life", says Shelley McKellar, an associate professorof the History of Medicine and Disease at the University of Western Ontario. "It was ubiquitous." And in the time before antibiotics and mass immunizations,diseasewas also a death sentence.

If a Canadian managed to outwit disease there was still a good chance he/she would die prematurely through conflict, childbirth or accident.The Red River Rebellion in 1870, and the North West Rebellion in 1885 both claimed many lives.And tens of thousands of Canadian soldiers died in each of the two world wars.

Canadian woman often died in childbirth. In the 1920s the rate was over four deaths in childbirth per day.Accidental injury led to infection and infection often led to death.

Today, how we die looks much different.

A century of medical breakthroughs, better public sanitation, and health care facilities has led to, "more and more people are dying at very old ages and/or at very advanced states of chronic illness", saysDonna Wilson, a professor of nursing at the University of Alberta, and co-author of the book Dying and Death in Canada.
An old-fashioned community wake in Newfoundland. The casket is through the door on the right. Painting by Sheila Hollender. (Mary Sheppard/CBC)

And today, most of us are dying in hospitals, not at home.This shift beganabout 60years ago when Parliament passed the 1948 National Health Grants legislation, which led to the construction of new, and the expansion of existing, hospitals across the country. In 1957, the introduction of theHospital Insurance and Diagnostics Act again resulted in the building of better facilities. It also provided Canadians with better access to medical interventions leading to a drop in death rates.

But with better care, came an unintended consequence:dying stopped being a part of life, says Dr. JoQuim Madrenas, professor of Microbiology, Immunology and Medicine at the University of Western Ontario.

It became invisible

A century ago, death was a public event with the deathbed acting as one of the central features of community life. "People basically saw a death as a social gathering in which the person dying was supported by the community, and the community basically got some type of closure from the dying person," says Madrenas.

But, with modern medical advances death, according to Madrenas, "stops being a social event. It becomes a very private event between you and your doctor, maybe your immediate family and group of friends. People die more and more alone."

"Death, which had been common and familiar, became unfamiliar, remote, invisible and expected only in old age," says Madrenas.

As Wilson notes: "Why talk about death and dying when they can give you a new heart, they can give you new lungs, they can give you antibiotics? Who died anymore?"

But the trend may be shifting away from a death in a hospital once again. Onereason isthat more and more Canadians living with terminal illness want to die at home, where they can be comfortable, rather than risk more medical treatments and interventions in a hospital. But another reason, says Wilson, is budget cuts.

"We really cut back hospital beds in the 1990s, the number of hospital beds declined by 25 per cent across Canada. Its not as easy to get into hospitals as it was in the past. You dont want to be stuck for20 hours in an emergency department as you wait to get into hospital, " according to Wilson.

Wilson says that after 50years of living life separated from death, we are starting to reconnect with it.

"Were now getting back into a growing awareness that people are dying, again. But its a different kind of dying. Its not the dying of younger people, its the dying of older people, and [we're starting to realize] how much help theyre going to need in the last months or years of life."