In long-term geriatric care, dying is rarely a single event; it is a shared atmosphere shaped by proximity, repetition, and ward culture. This narrative essay follows two women living “beside” death: one who becomes a feared symbol after multiple neighboring deaths, and another whose steady refusal (“no”) reveals autonomy as protection against dehumanization. Through these stories, the essay examines how patients and staff make meaning from loss, how superstition and stigma can emerge as informal coping, and how dignity can be eroded or restored through everyday communication and presence. It argues that long-term wards function as social and spiritual ecosystems where grief is communal, narratives spread quickly, and small acts as silence, beauty, companionship can become forms of care.
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Anat Romem
Palliative Care and Social Practice
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Herzog Hospital
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Anat Romem (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b606ea83145bc643d1d4ce — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/26323524261429986
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