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Doha
The World Innovation Summit for Health (WISH), an initiative of Qatar Foundation (QF), and the Vatican’s Pontifical Academy for Life have announced a joint symposium, titled ‘Religion and Medical Ethics: Palliative Care and the Mental Health of the Elderly’, to be held in Rome on December 11-12.
The first day of the symposium will focus on palliative care and provide an overview of current practices in Qatar and the Arabian Gulf region in comparison to Western practices. The sessions aim to highlight the existing gaps in modern scholarship on this topic, and investigate ways to tackle the ethical challenges found at the intersection of palliative care and religious bioethics.
Among the sessions will be a discussion on Muslim and Christian commonalities in approaches to palliative care that will highlight differences with the aim of better informing interfaith approaches to medical care. These sessions will emphasiae the important role of interfaith chaplaincy in hospice palliative care.
Discussions and presentations on the second day of the symposium will focus on the mental health of the elderly. Speakers and delegates will examine the significant potential benefits of religion and spirituality in improving elderly patients’ well-being and quality of life, and explore, from an interfaith perspective, the opportunities and challenges related to improving quality of life through religiously-informed mental health service provision.
Further topics being discussed across the two days include the palliative care of children and suicide among the elderly. Representatives of QF partner university Georgetown University in Qatar and QF member Hamad Bin Khalifa University’s Research Center for Islamic Legislation and Ethics will be among those speaking at the event.
The academic partners for the symposium will be the BMJ, which will be represented at the event by editors of its Journal of Medical Ethics.
Sultana Afdhal, CEO of WISH, said, “WISH was founded to help build a healthier world through global collaboration. We greatly appreciate this opportunity to work closely with the Pontifical Academy for Life to bring experts together in Rome who can help shine a spotlight on important issues at the intersection of religious and medical ethics and that deeply affect people of faith at critical times in their lives.”
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, president of the Pontifical Academy for Life, said, “Palliative care and the health of the elderly are two specific themes of great interest to our Academy. Engaging in a dialogue with the Islamic world responds to the specific mandate entrusted by Pope Francis to the Pontifical Academy.”
For further details and to register, visit: http://ethics.wish.org.qa
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11/09/2019
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