During the COVID-19 public health care crisis, as thousands of people are dying in hospitals without loved ones, two Rutgers Institute for Health, Health Care Policy & Aging Research experts discuss death, dying and end-of-life care during the global pandemic. Elissa Kozlov, a clinical psychologist and instructor at Rutgers School of Public Health, and Johanna Schoen, associate chair of the Department of History at Rutgers-New Brunswick’s School of Arts and Sciences, provide some insight about how we should prepare for this possibility. To read the full story.
Recent Posts
- Rutgers Medical Students Learn Importance of Humanity, Creativity and Connection in Patient-Centered Medicine.
- Artificial Intelligence Recreates the Motion of a Beating Heart Using Surface Electrical Recordings.
- Scientists Discover Potential Blood Test for Asthma Diagnosis and Severity.
- Local News Rutgers-Camden teams up with South Jersey charter school to ease nursing shortage.
- NJACTS Community Engagement Core COVID-19 Resources
Categories
- Community (2,362)
- Covid (992)
- CTO Events (6)
- News (2,999)
- Pilots (21)