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British Journal of Medical and Health Research

julian ungar-sargon

Author Profile
dominican university IL
2
Publications
1
Years Active
0
Collaborators
37
Citations

Publications by julian ungar-sargon

2 publications found • Active 2025-2025

2025

2 publications

Death Anxiety in Physicians and Patients: The Elephant in the Therapeutic Room

8/1/2025

ABSTRACT Death anxiety pervades modern medical practice, affecting both healthcare providers and patients in ways that significantly impact therapeutic relationships and end-of-life care. While clinical research has documented widespread death anxiety among physicians and patients, conventional psychological approaches treat mortality-related distress as a problem to be managed rather than a sacred threshold to be crossed. This essay examines death anxiety through the comparative lens of established psychological and medical literature alongside our theological framework of being and non-being, drawing on the foundational contributions of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, Cicely Saunders, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, James Hillman, and Rami Shapiro. Recent neuroscientific research revealing organized brain activity during cardiac arrest challenges assumptions about consciousness and death, suggesting that dying may involve heightened rather than diminished awareness. The Kabbalistic concept of tzimtzum—divine contraction or concealment—offers a theological framework that reframes apparent absence as the most profound form of divine presence, transforming death from pure negation to sacred encounter. This perspective suggests that healthcare providers' systematic avoidance of death-related dialogue creates an "elephant in the therapeutic room" that undermines effective care, while understanding patients as "sacred texts" requiring hermeneutic engagement transforms clinical practice from purely technical intervention to contemplative presence. The integration of theological insight with clinical research points toward transformative implications for medical education, institutional culture, and therapeutic relationships that honor both scientific rigor and spiritual depth. Rather than eliminating death anxiety through avoidance or management techniques, this framework suggests that mortality awareness can facilitate authentic presence and spiritual deepening in medical practice. The findings support developing integrated approaches that recognize human beings as fundamentally spiritual as well as biological entities, creating spaces where death anxiety becomes not a clinical problem but a spiritual invitation to transformation that serves both healer and patient in their shared journey through the mystery of existence.

Comfort or Control? A Critical Examination of Hospice Care and Coercion in the Modern Healthcare System

7/1/2025

ABSTRACT This article critiques the darker dimensions of hospice care and the coercive undercurrents of the broader healthcare system. Drawing on empirical studies, ethical analyses, and personal narratives, it argues that while hospice care is often idealized as compassionate end-of-life care, it can mask systemic neglect, profit motives, and disempowerment of patients. Similarly, coercion—both overt and subtle—pervades healthcare decision-making, particularly in mental health and end-of-life contexts. Through examination of institutional failures, Medicare exploitation, and ethical frameworks, this analysis reveals how systems designed to provide comfort, and care can paradoxically become mechanisms of control and neglect. The article calls for increased transparency, accountability, and ethical vigilance in reforming hospice oversight and addressing coercive healthcare practices. Keywords: Hospice care, healthcare coercion, medical ethics, end-of-life care, patient autonomy

Author Statistics
Total Publications:2
Years Active:1
First Publication:2025
Latest Publication:2025
Collaborators:0
Citations:37