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Hong Kong’s care homes for elderly struggle to offer ‘dying-in-place’ services

Demand among patients to spend their final days in familiar surroundings has been growing, but care homes say they lack resources

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“Dying in place” refers to care home services that let a patient spend their final days in familiar surroundings. Photo: Shutterstock

Hongkonger Roger Wong was determined to let his 100-year-old mother “pass away in peace” at the care home where she had lived for 13 years.

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The idea came to the 78-year-old’s mind after he witnessed his father and wife struggling in hospital towards the end of their lives, with the pair being repeatedly discharged and readmitted because of their health problems.

“It was agonising for me to watch them suffer,” the retired crane driver said. “They were covered in tubes and spent months in hospital before they passed away.

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“I hope my mum does not have to go through all this when her time arrives, and that I can stay with her throughout the process, though she isn’t yet comfortable with talking about death.”

The demand for “dying in place”, or letting a patient spend their final days in familiar surroundings, has been growing among Hong Kong’s rapidly ageing population.

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