Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander viewers are warned that the following website may contain images and voices of deceased persons.

Join the Critical Info Community
and be Rewarded!


Sign up to be one of the first users of the Critical Info Platform when it’s released in early 2025 and receive a lifetime 10% discount.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*

Sign up to download the speakers kit!

Join the Critical Info Community
and be Rewarded!


Sign up to be one of the first users of the Critical Info Platform when it’s released in early 2025 and receive a lifetime 10% discount.
Podcast Page - Banner Title

Compassionate Communities: Why We Need Each Other at the End of Life with Professor Samar Aoun AM

Listen, watch, follow
Apple Podcasts
Podcast Page - Podcast Preview
9th July 2026

Listen now

 

About this episode

What if the future of end-of-life care doesn't lie in hospitals, but within our communities?

In this episode, I sit down with Professor Samar Aoun AM, internationally recognised palliative care researcher, Founder and Chair of Compassionate Communities Australia, and one of Australia's leading voices in grief, bereavement and public health approaches to end-of-life care.

Samar shares how the death of her father and the contrast between community support in Lebanon and Australia inspired her groundbreaking research into grief and bereavement. Her work challenged traditional thinking and demonstrated that 90% of people cope with grief through the support of family, friends and community, while only 10% require professional intervention.

Together, we explore why Australia is facing a demographic "tsunami of death" as the population ages, why our health and aged care systems are struggling to keep up, and how compassionate communities can help people live, die and grieve well.

We discuss the importance of rebuilding death literacy and grief literacy, why caring networks matter, and how simple acts of kindness can transform the experience of caring, dying and grieving.

 

Remember. you may not be ready to die, but at least you can be prepared.

 

Take care,

Catherine

Show notes

Guest Bio
Podcast Guest - Image
Prof Samar Aoun AM

Prof Samar Aoun AM is Perron Institute Research Chair in Palliative Care at the University of Western Australia, Perron Institute for Neurological and Translational Science, Founder and chair of Compassionate Communities Australia and South-West Compassionate Communities Network in WA and immediate past chair of MND Australia and MND Association of Western Australia (MNDAWA).

 

Prof Aoun is an international leader in the promotion and advocacy of public health approaches to palliative care and led this approach for those living with grief and bereavement. Her research programs on supporting family carers at end of life and the public health approach to bereavement care have informed policy and practice at the national and international levels. Her vision is that every person, every family and every community knows what to do when someone is caring, dying or grieving.

 

Samar co-founded and chaired for 7 years the South West Compassionate Communities Network in Western Australia and has led the Compassionate Connector Program which offers the practical and social support needed by families with life limiting illnesses. The program significantly improved social connectedness and reduced hospital admissions. She founded and chairs Compassionate Communities Australia which aims to become a hub of knowledge and skills for community-led solutions that would lead to social and systems change.

 

She is a Council member of Public Health Palliative Care International and is a member of the Public Health Palliative Care reference group of the European Association of Palliative Care. She served as member of the International Expert Advisory Group for the development of best practice statements in bereavement care in palliative care in Europe. She also served on the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council committees and chaired their grant review panels for 5 years.

 

Among Samar’s awards: The Centenary Medal in 2003 from the Prime Minister of Australia; the 2018 Medal for Excellence from the European Society for Person Centred Healthcare, the 2023 WA Australian of the Year; the 2024 Lifetime Achievement Award from MND Australia; the President’s Cup from MNDAWA; and Member of the Order of Australia (AM), Australia Day Honours, January 2025.

Summary

What you'll hear in this episode:

  • How Samar's personal experience following her father's death shaped her life's work
  • The groundbreaking grief research that found 90% of people rely on community support
  • Why grief has become overly medicalised and what this means for society
  • What compassionate communities are and why they matter
  • Why Australia is unprepared for the coming "tsunami of death"
  • The gap between where Australians want to die and where they actually die
  • How the Compassionate Connector program reduced hospital admissions and improved social connectedness
  • Why building your caring network before you need it is essential
  • The difference between transactional care and relational care in aged care settings
  • Practical ways every person can become part of a compassionate community
Transcript

Demographic Death Wave Samar: And we're talking about the baby boomers, those baby boomers will all die within the next twenty years or so as well. so it's a, it's a calamity. Samar: It's like a tsunami of death that's going to face our systems, and they are not ready for it. They're not ready for this demographic shift that was coming, --  Cycling Club Care Network Samar: in Albany, Tony, who is with a, with a brain cancer, came back home and he said into Albany, which is like four hours drive south of Perth. had enough from being in Perth, you know, having more s- you know, surgery on hi ... Read More

Resources

Connect with Professor Samar Aoun AM

Learn more about Compassionate Communities Australia: https://compassionatecommunitiesaus.org.au/

Learn more about Professor Samar Aoun's work at the Perron Institute  https://www.perroninstitute.org/research/research-groups/samar-aoun/

& the University of Western Australia: https://www.uwa.edu.au/

 

Resources Mentioned in This Episode

Professor Allan Kellehear – internationally recognised pioneer of the Compassionate Communities movement and public health approaches to palliative care. His work inspired much of the global compassionate communities movement and Professor Aoun's own research.

Learn more: https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/our-staff/k/allan-kellehear/

Professor Bruce Rumbold OAM – Australian researcher, educator and leading advocate for public health approaches to palliative care, bereavement and death literacy.

Learn more: https://scholars.latrobe.edu.au/bdrumbold

Compassionate Cities: Public Health and End-of-Life Care by Professor Allan Kellehear

Book information: https://books.google.com/books/about/Compassionate_Cities.html?id=wvNOP8hpEk4C

Share

Podcast Icon

Recent Episodes:

Post Image
Compassionate Communities: Why We Need Each Other at the End of Life with Professor Samar Aoun AM
What if the future of end-of-life care doesn’t lie in hospitals, but within our communities? In this episode, I sit...
Post Image
Drawing to Remember: The Healing Power of Art After Baby Loss
Six babies are stillborn in Australia every day. Two babies die within their first 28 days of life, and a...
Post Image
Finding Purpose in Melbourne’s Forgotten Laneways with Tinky
When I first discovered Tinky’s tiny installations hidden throughout Melbourne’s laneways, I was instantly captivated. What looked like a whimsical...
Podcast alternate logo

Keep in touch

Stay in the loop with the latest Critical Info updates, events and podcast episodes.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.