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Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2021
OBJECTIVE A profound feeling of guilt and its role in complicating psychological reactions are accepted as central issues in suicide bereavement. However, research examining the relationship of guilt with mental disorders commonly following suicide ...
B. Wagner+2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
OBJECTIVE A profound feeling of guilt and its role in complicating psychological reactions are accepted as central issues in suicide bereavement. However, research examining the relationship of guilt with mental disorders commonly following suicide ...
B. Wagner+2 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Nursing Standard, 2016
A butterfly logo has been placed on neonatal cots to alert people that a baby from a multiple birth has died.
Egon Dejonckheere, Eiko I. Fried
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A butterfly logo has been placed on neonatal cots to alert people that a baby from a multiple birth has died.
Egon Dejonckheere, Eiko I. Fried
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Meaning reconstruction in bereavement: Development of a research program
Death Studies, 2019The death of a significant person, especially when it comes tragically or prematurely, can shake the foundations of our assumptive and relational world and lead to anguished attempts to find meaning in the loss and in our lives in its aftermath.
R. Neimeyer
semanticscholar +1 more source
A bereavement policy for bereavement workers
Bereavement Care, 2016AbstractThis article discusses the development of a bereavement policy for bereavement support staff. To date there seems to be very little literature regarding the wellbeing of staff working in bereavement settings when they experience bereavement themselves.
Rhinehart, Molly, Feeney, James
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Bereavement and Traumatic Bereavement: Working with the Two-Track Model of Bereavement [PDF]
Bereavement following loss through death is a universal human experience, but how it is experienced and understood is mediated by many variables. In this article, we stress the importance of a bifocal approach to understanding, assessing and intervening following the loss of significant persons using the framework of the Two-Track Model of Bereavement.
Eliezer Witztum+2 more
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Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1987
Despite the obvious fact that loss and bereavement are an integral part of the war experience, surprisingly little has been written about bereavement and grief in combat. This article discusses reasons for the resistance to the concepts of loss and bereavement in military psychiatry, distinctive aspects of combat bereavement, factors that impede ...
Ronald Garb+2 more
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Despite the obvious fact that loss and bereavement are an integral part of the war experience, surprisingly little has been written about bereavement and grief in combat. This article discusses reasons for the resistance to the concepts of loss and bereavement in military psychiatry, distinctive aspects of combat bereavement, factors that impede ...
Ronald Garb+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
2012
The human experience of loss and grief will touch us all. Grief is a deeply personal experience that will be influenced by culture, spiritual belief, the nature of the loss, gender, and the relationship with the deceased, whether it be as an individual or within a family setting.
Beverley Raphael+2 more
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The human experience of loss and grief will touch us all. Grief is a deeply personal experience that will be influenced by culture, spiritual belief, the nature of the loss, gender, and the relationship with the deceased, whether it be as an individual or within a family setting.
Beverley Raphael+2 more
openaire +1 more source
Journal of General Internal Medicine, 1989
If the joy and pleasure of intimate, caring relationships are accepted, then we must have the courage to grieve for their loss. Physicians and other helping professionals have access to the family at this critical time in the life cycle. This is an opportunity to influence the system, to be the “nonanxious presence” that promotes healing.
Jan Sturgis+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
If the joy and pleasure of intimate, caring relationships are accepted, then we must have the courage to grieve for their loss. Physicians and other helping professionals have access to the family at this critical time in the life cycle. This is an opportunity to influence the system, to be the “nonanxious presence” that promotes healing.
Jan Sturgis+2 more
openaire +3 more sources