Death doula working practices and models of care: the views of death doula training organisations

Author:

Rawlings DebORCID,Miller-Lewis LaurenORCID,Tieman JenniferORCID,Swetenham KateORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background The role of death doula has emerged in recent years, arguably as a result of overwhelming demands on carers, healthcare professionals and service providers in end-of-life care. Death doulas work independently without governing oversight and enact the role in various ways. The main driver of this evolving role is the organisations that train them. The aim of this study was to examine death doula training organisations’ views with regard to DD business models, incorporating the death doula role into other existing models of care, and role enactment. Methods An electronic survey was administered to 15 death doula training organisations in 5 countries asking additionally that they disseminate the survey. Responses were received from 13 organisations, based in Australia (n = 4), the US (n = 4), Canada (n = 2), the UK (n = 1), Sweden (n = 1) and New Zealand (n = 1). This paper provides the qualitative findings from four open-text questions posed within the survey related to models of care. Results Qualitative data analysis was inductive, themes were determined in relation to: (1) standardised business model for death doulas, (2) death doulas incorporated into existing models of care or existing funding options, (3) death doulas who volunteer their services rather than charge money, and (4) role specialisation such as has occurred with birth doulas. Conclusions The death doula role has the potential to be formally recognised in the future under national registration schemes, accompanied by death doula training required via certification. Until such time the death doula role will continue to evolve much as the birth doula role has, organically and unstructured. How and if death doulas are incorporated into existing models of health or social care remains to be seen as the organisations that train them push for independence, flexibility and fiscal independence.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine

Reference44 articles.

1. Rawlings D, Devery K, Tieman J, Tait P, Chakraborty A. A rapid review of the literature on end-of life care. Sydney: ACSQHC; 2021.

2. Rawlings D, Tieman J, Miller-Lewis L, Swetenham K. What role do death doulas play in end‐of‐life care? A systematic review. Health Soc Care Community. 2018;00:1–13.

3. O’Connor M. Doulas from cradle to grave: integration into conventional medical care. J Law Med. 2021;28(4):946–54.

4. Rawlings D, Litster C, Miller-Lewis L, Tieman J, Swetenham K. The voices of death doulas about their role in end of life care. Health Soc Care Community. 2020;28(1):12–21. https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.12833.

5. Rawlings D, Miller-Lewis L, Tieman J, Swetenham K. An international survey of death doula training organisations: the views of those driving death doula training and role enactment. Palliat Care Soc Pract. 2022;16:1–12. https://doi.org/10.1177/26323524221123344.

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