Healthcare


The Netherlands' healthcare system is well known for its excellent quality and accessibility, their healthcare belief systems are founded on a few fundamental ideas:
Access to Care for All: The Dutch healthcare system prioritizes universal coverage and access, guaranteeing that all people have access to a variety of health services.
High-quality Health Care Services: The system prioritizes providing high-quality care, emphasizing patient rights, information, and positive health results.
Solidarity Through Health Insurance: All citizens are required to have health insurance, which is intended to be accessible to all, encouraging a sense of shared responsibility and solidarity.


Death and Dying:
Because the Dutch are so open and transparent about death, they are renowned for having a more liberal stance on euthanasia and death. A large number of terminally ill individuals have requested euthanasia as a result of this.
Euthanasia:
The longest legal euthanasia practice in the world is in the Netherlands. The Euthanasia Act came into effect in 2002. This act is based on the belief that, under tight guidelines, doctors can provide euthanasia as a kind of mercy in circumstances of medically approved hopeless and tremendous pain and suffering. Regarding belief systems, older Dutch people's views on euthanasia are impacted by their beliefs, with less conventional religious frameworks allowing greater autonomy over euthanasia choices.


Burial Practices:
Due to a lack of cemetery space in the Netherlands, it is typical practice to rent grave places for a maximum of 20 years, after which the remains are moved to community graves. Because there is such a great demand for grave space, families often create general graves where three or more coffins are stacked on top of one another.


The compostable coffin, sometimes referred to as a "living coffin," was created by a Dutch start-up and provides a more environmentally friendly option for people who are laid to rest in the Netherlands.
Like the compostable coffin, some Dutch citizens opt for a "Natural burial," in which their body is covered with a shroud and allowed to decompose naturally into the ground.
Cremation accounted for 66.95% of all deaths in the Netherlands as of 2019.

NGO (Non-governmental organization):
If someone were to travel to the Netherlands and work with an NGO, here are a few things they should consider before going to ensure that they can communicate well~
1- Research what NGO you are going to work for. Knowing what skills you are going to need is important if you want to do a good job.
2- Even if the NGO's work is international in scope, it can be helpful to have language abilities, especially in Dutch, when working in the Netherlands.
3- It's crucial to develop abilities that can assist close cultural gaps, such as speaking properly, listening, and displaying positive body language.
4- be willing to modify your approach to adjust to the cultural expectations of their patients and coworkers, and be mindful of your own cultural beliefs and how these may affect your interactions.

Cites Used:
(Sources used are hyperlinked in blue)

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