Online Seminars on Grief Literacy - Seminar 4: Grief Literacy, how funerals can save medical costs and communities, Carl Becker, Japan
The purpose of this series of online seminars is to bring the concept of Grief Literacy to life by highlighting its various aspects and broad impact. There are seven one-hour seminars planned with international leaders in the field of Grief Literacy research and practice between September 2024 and March 2025. Each seminar will involve 30 minutes of presentation followed by 30 minutes of questions and dialogue. This seminar on 4 December is the fourth seminar.
Seminar 4: How funerals can save medical costs and communities
Denial of grief and denigration of rituals create higher risks for mourners’ subsequent psycho-physical problems, raising public medical welfare costs. Satisfying memorials are survivors’ last best chance to reunite with supportive family and old friends. Literature reviews and our own research show that it is better for society to recognize and share than to ignore grief.
Speaker: Carl Becker School of Medicine Kyoto University Japan
Carl Becker received his PhD on Death and Dying at the East-West Center of the University of Hawaii 1974 he moved to Japan, where his research has focused on ethics and psycho-social support for terminal patients. Becker leads a national survey of bereaved families and suicidal survivors, and has won numerous awards for his studies on death and dying. He serves on editorial boards of Mortality, Journal of Near-Death Studies, Journal for the Study of Spirituality, and medical journals.
Registration
Attendance at this seminar is free. After registration the zoom link will be sent to you a few days before the seminar.
More information and registration for other seminars go to the overview below.
Background Series of online Seminars on Grief Literacy
Grief and loss are fundamentally human experiences, touching on a very universal and existential layer of life. Yet there is great embarrassment in societies around this topic. Grief Literacy is a concept coined in 2020 by a sub-group of the International Workgroup for Death Dying Bereavement (IWGDDB). Grief Literacy is: a) The capacity to access, process, and use knowledge regarding the experience of loss. b) This capacity is multidimensional: it comprises knowledge to facilitate understanding and reflection, skills to enable action, and values to inspire compassion and care. c) These dimensions connect and integrate via the interdependence of individuals within socio-cultural contexts (Breen et al., 2020). The transformative value of the concept consists in making visible the extent to which current societies or cultures avoid grief and helping us to formulate new strategies to address it. Specifically, it addresses a lack of appropriate compassionate responses to people in mourning.
The purpose of this series of online seminars is to bring the concept of Grief Literacy to life by highlighting its various aspects and broad impact. We hope this series will contribute to a greater awareness and sensitivity of how people respond to their own grief or the grief of others, and will lead to an increase in the compassionate support of ordinary people among themselves.
Information
There are seven one-hour seminars planned with international leaders in the field of Grief Literacy research and practice between September 2024 and March 2025. Each seminar will involve 30 minutes of presentation followed by 30 minutes of questions and dialogue. The seminars will be held online and are intended for a broad audience, including students, PhDs, staff, volunteers, citizens, and interested professionals/parties from (grief) networks or care institutions.Collaboration
Together we invest in a more grief literate society. This is a collaboration between the following universities, organisations and institutes:
- Informal care & Care ethics, University for Humanistic Studies, the Netherlands
- Compassionate Communities Centre of Expertise (COCO) at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
- Curtin University Perth, Australia
- Policy Science Unit, Kyoto University School of Medicine, Japan
- Agora, knowledge and development organization: social approach to palliative care, the Netherlands
- Department of Human Centered Design, Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
- Pharos, Dutch Centre of Expertise on Health Disparities, Netherlands
- The Local Social Policy Unit for City and PCSW Bruges, Belgium
- Centre of Expertise Perspective in Health, Avans University of Applied Sciences, Netherlands
- Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
- School of Social Work, Renison University College, affiliated with the University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
- Department of Social Work and Social Administration, Faculty of Social Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China
- Caring connections: A Hope and Comfort in Grief Program. University of Utah College of Nursing
- Sue Ryder
Topic | Speaker | Date |
Seminar 1 | Lauren Breen Curtin University Australia | 24 SEPTEMBER 2024 2 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 2 | Mary Ellen Macdonald Halifax, Canada | 15 OCTOBER 2024 2 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 3 | Susan Cadell Ontario, Canada | 19 NOVEMBER 2024 2 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 4 How funerals can save medical costs and communities | Carl Becker School of Medicine Kyoto University Japan | 4 DECEMBER 2024 2 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 5 Grief Literacy in the UK, equipping people for life’s biggest adventure | Bianca Neumann-Morris UK | 14 of JANUARY 2025 2 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 6 | Kathie Supiano Salt Lake City, VS | 20 February 2025 4 PM CET Amsterdam timezone |
Seminar 7 Measuring and Quantifying Grief Literacy: Towards a Grief Literacy Index | Yong Hao Ng Hong Kong | 25 MARCH 2025 10 AM CET Amsterdam timezone |
check your time here |
Contactpersoon | Anne Goossensen |
Locatie | online |
griefliteracy@uvh.nl | |
Datum | 4-12-2024 |
Openingstijden | 2PM CET Amsterdam timezone |