Results 151 to 160 of about 30,066 (213)
Ambiguous Loss Among Aging Migrants: A Concept Analysis- and Nursing Care-Oriented Model. [PDF]
Al-Hamad A +4 more
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Correction to: Regulating community well-being through traditional mourning rituals: Insights from the Luhya People of Kenya. [PDF]
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Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 2023
Playing is a form of responsiveness that involves a shift from more formal interpretation about defense, unconscious fantasy, or transference to one that employs humor or irony regarding the content of fantasy or poses a more direct confrontation between internal fantasy and external reality. Playing is differentiated from more formal interpretation by
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Playing is a form of responsiveness that involves a shift from more formal interpretation about defense, unconscious fantasy, or transference to one that employs humor or irony regarding the content of fantasy or poses a more direct confrontation between internal fantasy and external reality. Playing is differentiated from more formal interpretation by
openaire +2 more sources
Mourning and loss: Finding meaning in the mourning for Hillsborough
This paper focuses on the public mourning following the Hillsborough stadium disaster of 1989. It does so in particular by concentrating on two different sites of analysis: the books of condolence signed in its aftermath and the personal and unexpected ...
Michael Brennan
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Journal of Religion & Health, 1972
Grief is a universal phenomenon. It most notably occurs following a loss by death, but may occur following any separation. It is a definite psychiatric syndrome with a characteristic onset, course, duration, and termination. The normal period of acute grief is from six to twelve weeks, and the normal grief reaction is completed within two years.
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Grief is a universal phenomenon. It most notably occurs following a loss by death, but may occur following any separation. It is a definite psychiatric syndrome with a characteristic onset, course, duration, and termination. The normal period of acute grief is from six to twelve weeks, and the normal grief reaction is completed within two years.
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American Journal of Psychiatry, 1969
The authors examine the process of mourning in a culture whose religions sanction the implied presence of the deceased through ancestor worship, as compared to a culture where this is not acceptable or encouraged. Most of 20 Japanese widows interviewed during the acute grief phase of mourning adhered to the cultural beliefs and were less depressed and ...
J, Yamamoto +3 more
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The authors examine the process of mourning in a culture whose religions sanction the implied presence of the deceased through ancestor worship, as compared to a culture where this is not acceptable or encouraged. Most of 20 Japanese widows interviewed during the acute grief phase of mourning adhered to the cultural beliefs and were less depressed and ...
J, Yamamoto +3 more
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Grief, Mourning, and Pathological Mourning
Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1975An individual may present with a multitude of symptoms following an acute loss. Helping the patient go through the essential "grief work" may prevent prolonged and serious alterations in social adjustment as well as potential medical disease.
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Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 1989
Early development is not simply a succession, of gains; it is also a succession of losses. The child's ability to master these losses is a fundamental determinent of future development. British psychoanalytic theory is rooted in the primacy of relationships for early development, and the process by which the child's ego copes with loss plays a ...
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Early development is not simply a succession, of gains; it is also a succession of losses. The child's ability to master these losses is a fundamental determinent of future development. British psychoanalytic theory is rooted in the primacy of relationships for early development, and the process by which the child's ego copes with loss plays a ...
openaire +1 more source

