Compassion & Choices
Claire Cepuran is an experienced professional currently serving as the Clinical Engagement & Education Program Manager at Compassion & Choices since December 2020, after previously holding the position of Program Associate. Prior roles include Project Assistant at the National Addiction and HIV Data Archive Program, where responsibilities encompassed user support and data access application processing, and Research Assistant at the Center for Political Studies at the University of Michigan, focusing on data analysis related to significant political events. Claire co-founded and co-presided over Progressives at the University of Michigan, a student organization dedicated to grassroots activism, and contributed as a Finance Intern for the Michigan Democratic Party. Claire's academic credentials include a Bachelor’s Degree in Public Policy from the University of Michigan and ongoing studies for a Master of Public Health at The University of Edinburgh.
This person is not in the org chart
This person is not in any offices
Compassion & Choices
Compassion & Choices envisions a society that affirms life and accepts the inevitability of death, embraces expanded options for compassionate dying, and empowers everyone to choose end-of-life care that reflects their values, priorities, and beliefs. For over thirty years we have reduced people’s suffering and given them some control in their final days – even when injury or illness takes their voice. We are experts in what it takes to die well. Compassion & Choices works with individuals and allied organizations throughout America to: Make aid in dying an open, legitimate option recognized throughout the medical field and permitted in more states. Increase patient control and reduce unwanted interventions at the end of life. Pass additional laws ensuring full information and access to all end-of-life care options. Normalize accurate, unbiased language throughout the end-of-life choice discussion (“aid in dying” instead of “assisted suicide”). Establish aid in dying as a prime motivator in voter decision-making. Support the expansion of the end-of-life choice movement and exert a leadership role in it.