The hardest part of end-of-life care often
happens before hospice begins.

Learn How End-of-Life Doulas Help Families During The Time They Are Often Most Unsupported

Families are overwhelmed. No one is clearly explaining what’s changing
and the support they need is often inconsistent or missing. If you’ve
seen this, or felt it firsthand, this orientation will give you
a clear picture of where end-of-life doulas fit in.

Professional Orientation:
How End-of-Life Doulas Help From Before Hospice
Through End of Life

HOSTED BY: Deanna Flores Cochran, RN
26 Years at the Bedside • Mentor of End-of-Life Doulas

watch free Orientation
WEBINAR - Opt In - from FB AD 2

You’ll go straight to the free session once you click above.

This isn’t surface-level information.

It’s a professional orientation to one of the most overlooked support roles in healthcare and community care today.

In this training you’ll learn:

  • How the End-of-Life Doula role fits in to the modern landscape of illness through death.
  • How End-of-Life Doulas must prepare themselves to be during a visit to be able to be of maximum impact.
  • The one thing families need most when emotions run high. (It’s not advice, solutions, or “the right words.”)
  • What the role really involves (beyond the stereotypes)

This orientation was created for people who have seen firsthand how difficult serious illness can be for families and want to better understand where they fit.

WEBINAR - Opt In - from FB AD 2


About Deanna Flores Cochran, RN

For more than 26 years, Deanna Flores Cochran has worked with families facing serious illness, caregiving, dying, and end-of-life transitions.

In 2005, she began private end-of-life doula practice and later founded the first End-of-Life Doula Certificate Program in the United States in 2010.

Her work has influenced thousands of doulas, caregivers, advocates, and helping professionals worldwide through education, mentorship, speaking, and writing.

She is the author of the Amazon bestselling book Accompanying the Dying and is widely recognized for her pioneering work in the time before hospice—where families are often most overwhelmed and least supported.

Today, her focus remains the same as it was when she began: helping people better understand what families need and how thoughtful support can reduce unnecessary suffering.


As part of this free training, you’ll also receive Deanna’s professional insights
and tools a few times per week. Unsubscribe anytime.