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Adistie, Fanny; Lumbantobing, Valentina B. M.; Maryam, Nenden Nur Asriyani – Child Care in Practice, 2020
Purpose: The response of each child to terminal illness treatment is highly individual. This will certainly affect the level and type of perceived needs. This study is conducted to examine the needs of children with terminal illness from the perspective of nurses and parents. Method: A qualitative descriptive study was conducted in this research.…
Descriptors: Children, Terminal Illness, Nurses, Parent Attitudes
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Waldrop, Deborah P. – Health & Social Work, 2007
Caregivers experience multiple losses during the downhill trajectory of a loved one's terminal illness. Using mixed methods, this two-stage study explored caregiver grief during a terminal illness and after the care recipient's death. Caregiver grief was a state of heightened responsiveness during end-stage care: anxiety, hostility, depression,…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Caregivers, Terminal Illness, Sleep
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Cochrane, Joyce B.; And Others – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1991
Examined relationships among death anxiety, disclosure behaviors, and attitudes toward terminal care of 99 oncologists. Found death anxiety scores lower for oncologists than typically reported for physicians. Short-term repeated exposure to dying patients resulted in comfort with dying patients whereas long-term repeated exposure resulted in…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Cancer, Death, Disclosure
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Smith, Elizabeth D. – Social Work, 1995
Presents a model of transpersonal intervention that social work clinicians can use when working with terminally-ill clients. Model assumes that individuals possess a level of transpersonal development, with related dimensions of spiritual awareness and personal death perspective; the degree of interrelatedness of these two dimensions influences…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Bereavement, Coping, Death
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Hayslip, Bert, Jr.; And Others – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1992
Administered measures of overt and covert fear of death to 20 healthy men and 13 men diagnosed with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Groups did not differ significantly on overt measure; AIDS group had higher total scores on covert measure. Findings suggest that one's life trajectory is redefined when the diagnosis of terminal illness…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Anxiety, College Students, Coping
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Viney, Linda L.; And Others – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1994
Compared palliative care staff with staff from burn and neonatal units and with mature age general nursing trainees at end of training. Found that palliative care staff expressed better quality of life, in terms of significantly less anxiety and depression, as well as more good feelings than other staff groups. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Anxiety, Death, Depression (Psychology), Foreign Countries