new |
Family Dignity Intervention: Psycho-Socio-Spiritual Care for Terminally-Ill Patients and their Families
17 and 18 March 2025
Registration open. Please register by 21 Feb 2025
This two-day professional workshop will provide participants with a unique opportunity to learn and experience a novel and clinically robust Family Dignity Intervention (FDI) for cultivating existential wholeness among terminally-ill patients and their families facing the end of life.
FDI is founded upon an empirical foundation on dignified palliative care in Asia and informed by Dignity Therapy; it comprises a highly-focus meaning-oriented interview with individual patient-caregiver dyad that is recorded, transcribed, and edited into a legacy document for sharing with the dyad’s family. A recent Randomized Controlled Trial with 140 participants provided strong evidence of FDI’s efficacy in improving patients’ quality of life, hope, positive life outlook and life meaning, as well as for decreasing caregivers’ stress and depressive symptoms while elevating quality of life and positive life outlook. FDI is an innovative and effective intervention for advancing holistic palliative care in Singapore.
Through mini-lectures, role-plays, hands-on practices, experiential exercises and case sharing, legacy document writing, and large and small group discussions, participants will learn the theoretical foundation, clinical skills and techniques of FDI for facilitating open and compassionate dialogue between patients and their carers that promote appreciation and reconciliation, foster relational bonds, and elicit transgenerational wisdoms to be shared across generations through the creation of a family legacy document. Participants will also learn ways to incorporate FDI into the provision of Advance Care Planning.
Please refer to the brochure here.
By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:
- Define the construct of dignity as it relates to palliative and end-of-life populations in the Asian context.
- Describe the association between an undermined sense of dignity and physical and psychological outcomes.
- Outline the theoretical underpinnings of FDI as a psycho-therapeutic intervention.
- Identify the practical counselling skills and etiquette required to conduct FDI.
- Experience taking on the role of FDI therapist, patient and caregiver through role play.
- Summarize the rationale for and steps involved in editing and creating an FDI legacy document.
- Discuss barriers and facilitators to implementing FDI in practice.
- Articulate various approaches for how FDI can be employed alongside Advance Care Planning.
- Reflect upon how FDI could be used in participants’ own clinical environment.
Doctors, Registered Nurses, Advanced Care Practice Nurses, Allied Health Professionals, Psychosocial Staff, Support Care Staff
Prof Andy Hau Yan HO, PhD, EdD, MFT
Prof Andy Hau Yan Ho, PhD, EdD, MFT, is Professor of Psychology and Medicine at the School of Social Sciences and the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, as well as Founding Director of the Action Research for Community Health (ARCH) Laboratory, at Nanyang Technological University (NTU) Singapore. He is also Deputy Director (Research) of PalC, the Immediate Past President of the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC), and currently serves as Board Director of the prestigious International Work Group on Death, Dying and Bereavement (IWGDDB).
Dr Geraldine Tan-Ho is a Research Fellow and Senior Counsellor at NTU and heads the FDI therapy for terminally ill patients and their families. She is a Certified Thanatologist for her professional and educational achievements in the field of death, dying, and bereavement.
Asst Prof Paul Victor Patinadan
Asst Prof Paul Victor Patinadan is Assistant Professor at the School of Social Sciences, at the NTU. He is also an ADEC certified Thanatologist and plays an active role in the ARCH Lab. He has a special interest in psycho-socio-spiritual interventions and therapies in the area of end-of-life care and grief and bereavement facilitation for families.
Fees before subsidy: SGD 490.50 per person (including 9% GST)
*Prevailing fee subsidy for staff working in eligible Community Care organisations:
90% for Singaporean/PR and 45% for non-Singaporean/PR.
*Organisations will be billed the amount after subsidy.
Dates: 17 and 18 March 2025
Time: 9.30am – 5.30pm
Venue: Dover Park Hospice, Level 3 Training Room TTSH Integrated Care Hub 1 Tan Tock Seng Link, Singapore 307382
Scan to Register Now!
Register by 21 Feb 2025
For staff of Community Care Organizations (CCOs): https://lms.wizlearn.com/AIC |
For those who are not staff of CCOs:https://forms.office.com/r/GwU13GYDy0 |
For enquiries, please email to enquiries@palc.org.sg.