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      Roma Never Die Alone.

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          Abstract

          A common characteristic of Roma as a cultural group is that they do not allow their elderly to die alone. Nevertheless, rooted in a mainstream cultural perspective of health provision services, public institutions usually do not allow Roma people to be with their loved ones in their last moments. Following the communicative methodology, we conducted a communicative case study on the death of the most relevant female Roma leader in Catalonia. She was accompanied by more than two hundred family members and friends in her room and corridor at an important hospital in Barcelona. We performed our research in the 2 years following her death to obtain the reflections of the Roma members involved. These reflections revealed the egalitarian dialogue forged between these Roma members and the hospital personnel, which enabled the former to embrace their culture and support their loved ones before death. Because this dialogue was possible and fruitful, the acknowledgment of cultural diversity and the improvement of the quality of services offered to Roma might also be possible in other health institutions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Qual Health Res
          Qualitative health research
          SAGE Publications
          1049-7323
          1049-7323
          Dec 2017
          : 27
          : 14
          Affiliations
          [1 ] 1 University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
          [2 ] 2 Autonomous University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
          Article
          10.1177/1049732317729138
          28905680
          91d9de32-2366-488d-b22d-f8000f7aa96b
          History

          Catalonia,Roma traditions,communicative case study,death,elderly people,qualitative methods,respect,solidarity

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