The health care workers and nurses particularly can apply palliative care principles to dying patients that experience fear of loneliness (Rokach et all, 2007). Loneliness is an integral part of ill health, for both the patient and his or her caregivers. Palliative care provided in a hospice or at home has the main goal to achieve the best quality of remaining life for the dying clients and their families. Palliative care enables and encourages patients to live actively until death, free of fears. It includes pain and symptom management, creation of a caring environment, and an effective treatment.
One of the most agonizing elements of death is separating from friends and family. It is also hard to leave of all that the patient owned, had, and knew behind. What is more, caring for a dying person creates considerable strain for caregivers and may affect their working schedule, family life, and social relationships. Their distress is evident in the form of depression, anxiety, anger, health problems, and