Discover the care and support we offer
We provide Hospice care & support to patients and their loved ones living in Kent and East Sussex. Learn more about how we can help you.
If you or someone you love may benefit from Hospice care, you can find out more using the information below. For support or advice at any time of the day or night, please visit our Help Hub.
We provide Hospice care & support to patients and their loved ones living in Kent and East Sussex. Learn more about how we can help you.
Complete one of these short forms and we will contact you. There is no need to wait for a referral from your GP or healthcare professional.
We need to raise over £8 million every year to provide outstanding Hospice care to the local community. To get involved with our fundraising activities, design your own, or make a donation, use the information on this page.
The Japanese approach to death is heavily based on ‘Gimu’ – the moral debt that a child owes to their parents. ‘Gimu’ translates as duty, responsibility, duty to society and obligation to family. Throughout their lives, Japanese strive to repay these obligations. This seems abstract to us in the West, but it implies honour which is fundamentally important to Japanese people.
According to traditional Japanese beliefs, the spirits of the dead are always nearby, and may even visit their loved ones during certain times of year. When it comes to death, the children of the dead can repay some of this obligation by helping older relatives and friends to pass in peace. They must also perform all the rituals at the funeral and continue to offer the dead food, drink, and offerings so that they may enjoy an honourable eternity.
Mexicans, with their culture drawn from a mix of indigenous beliefs and Catholicism, deal very openly with death.
Grief isn’t experienced privately, but in your community. The 48-hour wake that follows a death is frequently held in a home. One room is set aside to allow people to spend time with the deceased who will be in an open coffin. In a second room, people will talk, eat, drink, play dominos and play music.
Once a year, Mexicans remember their dead with the Dia de los Muertos celebration. Literally, ‘The Day of the Dead.’ Mexicans believe that we die three times – when we are first aware of our mortality as teenagers, when we die, and the last time someone says our name. This celebration serves to keep relatives and friends ‘alive.’
The importance of family is paramount to both cultures. And children of the deceased work hard to honour their parents and ensure they have a smooth ride in the next world. Just as their children will do for them.
Swedes and Australians share a pragmatism that is reflected in the way they approach death.
Along with the sorrow of death, there is an uplifting joy and celebration shared by both Jews and Humanists.
Ghanaians and Sikhs share the belief that our lives here on earth are just a step onward toward a better life.
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