Abstract

BackgroundAdvances in medicine have helped many to live longer lives and to be able to meet health challenges. However death rates are anticipated to increase given the ageing population and chronic disease progression. Being able to talk about death is seen to be important in normalising death as part of life and supporting preparedness for death. Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) provide opportunities for the community to engage in collaborative learning. A 5 week MOOC was developed covering four main topics (language and humour, representations of death, medicalisation of dying, and digital dying) aiming:To enable participants to openly and supportively discuss and learn about issues around living, death and dying,To explore the normally unheard opinions and views of Australians around death and dying, andTo determine what effect online learning and discussions offered through the MOOC had on participants’ feelings and attitudes towards death and dying.MethodsData was captured on engagement rates in the various MOOC activities. Death Attitudes were measured by five items representing the MOOC’s learning objectives and completed at enrolment and conclusion. MOOC Satisfaction was measured with six items at the end of the MOOC. Descriptive statistics were produced for each variable and Chi-Square Tests of Independence assessed the extent of the relationship between categorical variables. Socio-demographic variables were examined as predictors of the outcome variables of MOOC engagement, MOOC satisfaction, and death attitudes. Ethical approval was received from Flinders University Social and Behavioural Research Ethics Committee (Project No. 7247).ResultsOne thousand one hundred fifty six people enrolled in the Dying2Learn MOOC with 895 participating in some way. Enrolees were primarily female (92.1%). Age ranged from 16 to 84 (mean = 49.5, SD = 12.3). MOOC satisfaction scores were high. Responses to the experience of participating in the MOOC were very positive, with mean scores ranging from 4.3 to 4.6 (aligning with agreement and strong agreement to statements on the value of participating). Death Attitudes were positive at commencement but increased significantly following participation.ConclusionsThe Dying2Learn MOOC provided an environment that enabled open and supportive discussion around death and dying and influenced attitudinal change.

Highlights

  • IntroductionReflection on ‘How do people engage with death and dying?’ [Comment]

  • ModuleIntroduce yourself! [Comment]How did you find us? [Comment]Massive open online course (MOOC) experience and motivations [Private Survey]Module 1: How we engage with death and dyingReflection on ‘No Laughing Matter’ [Comment]Find a Joke for ‘No Laughing Matter’ [Submission]Words are not enough - Euphemisms [Submission]Reflection on ‘How do people engage with death and dying?’ [Comment]

  • One thousand one hundred fifty six people enrolled in the Dying2Learn MOOC with 895 participating in some way

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Summary

Introduction

Reflection on ‘How do people engage with death and dying?’ [Comment]. Death rates are anticipated to increase given the ageing population and chronic disease progression. Public health and medical interventions have meant that for many people there has been an opportunity to live longer and for others the ability to live with diseases which may previously have resulted in deaths at an earlier age. As the population continues to age and as chronic diseases advance and progress, death rates will rise [1]. This means for individuals and for societies, there is likely to be increasing exposure to death and dying within their families, their communities and their workplaces. There are indications that individuals and communities are not comfortable in discussing death and dying [3, 4]

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