Holistic Death Care Classes
for Medical Professionals

coalescing your nursing and my midwifery to create holistic death care

I love being with end-of-life nurses and nursing students. Their passion for their work is something that I truly understand,
and when we get to spend time together in my Holistic Death Care classes for medical professionals we see each others’ hearts
and we appreciate the opportunity to be together.

I have been a guest teacher for nursing students at Kennesaw State University and
Georgia State University. I have been invited to be a part of speaking panels with other death care professionals for Emory University and New York University. And, I have had the honor of teaching Holistic Death Care classes for hospice groups that want to broaden their scope of practice
to include holistic practices for their patients and their nursing staff.

Topics covered in the classes:
The Poetry of Dying
- How a midwife teaches the signs and symptoms of death and dying
The Importance of Slowing Everything Down After Loss - From the latest research on Grief to how the general public views the dying body
Grief Care for Medical Professionals - How to find emotional sustainability in your work, even when time is of the essence
New Death Care and After Loss Care Options - What the general public is learning from their community death doulas

Classes are two hours in length and the fee for the class is $600.

You and your patients will be greatly served by this class.

“I requested that Narinder attend my nursing ethics lecture on death and dying. I had no criteria for her content as I wanted to hear what she would
want nurses to know when caring for patients in their last days to hours. The presentation was more of a conversation with young adults about their preconceived notions of the responsibilities of providers in the care of a patient that is actively dying for non-traumatic reasons. 

I can't say enough about how wonderful the Holistic Death Care for Medical Professionals class was. Narinder is engaging and makes the conversation of death and dying incredibly peaceful, normalizing what our society is incredibly afraid of. My students are still talking about how much they enjoyed her and how much more they appreciate the process of caring for dying patients and their families.

I would highly recommend Narinder as a presenter in any course that discusses the care of dying patients and their families from a caring theory perspective at either the undergraduate or graduate level.”

Dr. M'Lyn Spinks, DNS, RN, CHSE, CNE