Guaranteeing the right to a safe and culturally appropriate death: the meaning of occupations in the life-death-rebirth triad from the Colombian indigenous perspective

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/2526-8910.ctoARF277736171%20

Keywords:

Indigenous Culture, Intercultural Health, Attitude to Death, End of life, Culture, Occupational Therapy, Palliative Care

Abstract

The spiritual value attributed to death, by the guardians of the heart of the world in Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia, as in other indigenous cultures, integrates a social, physical, ethical, ecological, and emotional preparation to make a healthy accompaniment to life after death. Its importance goes far beyond a vision related to spectacular events or the demystification of the indigenous worldview as being considered “poor or vulnerable”. Through a situated reflection of the health, illness and care processes within an indigenous context at the end of life, we propose to consider the meaning of occupations in the triad of life - death - rebirth, to ensure a compliance with the right of one that alludes to the meaning of a safe and culturally appropriate death. The occupational dimension, as an agent for creating and interpreting the collective meanings of indigenous communities through the espiritugogía preceded by their ancestry, can offer other intercultural perspectives of ancient palliative care and differentiated and respectful support by health systems.

Published

2024-05-23

How to Cite

León Perilla, V. M., & Magalhães, L. (2024). Guaranteeing the right to a safe and culturally appropriate death: the meaning of occupations in the life-death-rebirth triad from the Colombian indigenous perspective. Brazilian Journal of Occupational Therapy, 32, e3617. https://doi.org/10.1590/2526-8910.ctoARF277736171

Issue

Section

Article of Reflection or Essay