When patients and their families are involved in medical care discussions (be they life-sustaining interventions, quality of life issues or end of life matters), their decision-making may not only be impacted by physical or psychological symptoms. What happens when …

For this online resource, the Case Studies have been taken from the new Woolf Institute publication, Diversity in End of Life Care: A Handbook on Caring for Jewish, Christian and Muslim Patients. The Handbook has been designed to use as a tool during training sessions and also for continued learning and development on the wards and in public health spaces where it will serve as an active resource for those who seek to understand how to respond to increasingly diverse communities requiring care and support.

For further information, contact Dr Emma Harris at eth22@cam.ac.uk or diversityinendoflifecare@woolf.cam.ac.uk.