A Buddhist-informed approach to tending the patient's spiritual dimension alongside physical symptoms, recognizing that meaning and purpose ease the dying process.
Dharma means both the teachings of the Buddha and the fundamental nature of reality. In palliative care, dharma care means attending to what makes life meaningful for each patient: their values, relationships, unfinished business, and sense of purpose. Dipa Ma lived and taught dharma to the end; her presence itself was tending. A framework of dharma care trains clinicians to ask not only "How is your pain?" but "What matters most to you now? What do you want to be remembered for? What would bring your heart peace?" These conversations often reveal that physical comfort alone is insufficient; patients need to feel their life had meaning. Rituals, legacy projects, family reconciliations, and spiritual practice become medical interventions. Research shows patients with strong sense of purpose experience less depression and better symptom control. This concept integrates Buddhist psychology—which sees spiritual clarity as fundamental health—into the core of palliative medicine rather than relegating it to chaplaincy.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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