- Patients challenged by a chronic or terminal illness
- Adult children concerned or worried about their parents
- Any adult who wishes to plan effectively for the last chapter of life
- Any designated Proxy who must make life-determining decisions for another human being
- Attorneys, especially those involved in estate planning and elder-law
- Physicians
- Psychologists and counselors
- Spiritual and religious leaders
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- Social workers
- Nurses
- Hospice and palliative care personnel
- All who worry about the prolonged indignity of Alzheimer’s disease
- Politicians and health policy makers
- Administrators of hospitals and long-term care facilities
- Those concerned with medical, life, or long-term care insurance
- Students intrigued by the subject of end-of-life bioethics
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