Abstract

ABSTRACT Globalization has created singular problems that increase the need for an international response to health and social problems. While the international hospice movement is expanding, many countries still struggle to provide adequate hospice and palliative care services in the face of limited financial resources and knowledge about the usefulness of these services among the general public. This article describes the experience of one Fulbright Scholar in a country with a developing system of services and organizations for hospice and palliative care. This professional exchange primarily involved teaching about health social work and end-of-life and palliative care to students in a college in Northeastern Hungary.

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