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Csikai, Ellen L. – Health and Social Work, 2004
Ethical dilemmas are inherent in every health care setting. A sample of hospice social workers with no direct access to a hospice ethics committee (N = 110) was surveyed regarding ethical issues in hospice care, how the issues were managed, and the extent to which social workers participated in resolution of ethical dilemmas. Common issues…
Descriptors: Patients, Terminal Illness, Social Work, Hospices (Terminal Care)

Ayres, Joe; Hopf, Tim – Communication Research Reports, 1995
Finds that students who reported high communication apprehension (CAs) were less willing to communicate, less willing to volunteer, less willing to work with terminally ill patients, and felt less confident about their communication than low CAs, and disclosed less to terminally ill patients than did people in any other circumstance. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication

Hayslip, Bert, Jr.; And Others – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1991
Analyzed response bias among 34 recipients of care in hospice. Found nonrespondents to have better bereavement prognoses and tended to care for patients who were younger, male, and in program for shorter time. Nonrespondents were in contact with staff less than were respondents. Data are consistent with earlier research showing significant…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Death, Hospices (Terminal Care), Participant Characteristics

Hjorleifsdottir, Elisabet; Carter, Diana E. – Nurse Education Today, 2000
Interviews with 12 fourth-year student nurses in Scotland indicated that they found communicating with terminally ill and dying patients and their families difficult. Although lectures on death and dying were helpful, support and guidance for dealing with these issues in clinical practice were needed. (SK)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Death, Foreign Countries, Higher Education

Becker, Janet E. – Health and Social Work, 2004
Members of the Association of Oncology Social Workers completed a survey, which included the Hospice Philosophy Scale (HPS) assessing the likelihood of the worker referring a terminally ill patient to hospice, background and experience, and demographics. The respondents held overwhelmingly favorable attitudes toward hospice philosophy and care,…
Descriptors: Patients, Social Work, Referral, Oncology

Range, Lillian M.; Martin, Stephen K. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1990
Examined how circumstances of a suicide victim's life may influence people's responses in college students (n=180) who read a fictitious newspaper article about a man who committed suicide following psychological pain, physical pain, or terminal illness. Results indicated that subjects were intolerant of suicide when the victim was suffering from…
Descriptors: Attitudes, College Students, Depression (Psychology), Grief

Mesler, Mark A. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1995
Based on nearly three years of participant-observation research in hospice settings, factors that interfere with the hospice philosophy of providing patient autonomy include efforts at symptom control, patient residence, patient disease state, and staff limit setting. Discusses examples, implications, and staff attempts at solutions. (JPS)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Death, Ethics, Higher Education
Van Vorst, Rebecca F.; Crane, Lori A.; Barton, Phoebe Lindsey; Kutner, Jean S.; Kallail, K. James; Westfall, John M. – Journal of Rural Health, 2006
Context: Barriers to providing optimal palliative care in rural communities are not well understood. Purpose: To identify health care personnel's perceptions of the care provided to dying patients in rural Kansas and Colorado and to identify barriers to providing optimal care. Methods: An anonymous self-administered survey was sent to health care…
Descriptors: Patients, Hospices (Terminal Care), Rural Areas, Health Personnel

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

Beckerman, Nancy L. – Death Studies, 1995
Explores many dimensions of suicide among the terminally ill, including preemptive, surcease, and rational suicide. The critical issues addressed are the incidence of suicide in HIV-positive individuals, contributing factors associated with the risk of suicide among people with HIV/AIDS, and the clinical and ethical implications of this issue for…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Case Studies, Counselor Role, Death

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

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

Viney, Linda L.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Compared quality of life of terminal cancer patients (n=182) in two palliative care units with that of those in general hospital. Patients in specialized palliative care units were found to differ from those dying in hospital, showing less indirectly expressed anger but more positive feelings. They also reported more anxiety about death but less…
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Foreign Countries, Hospices (Terminal Care)
O'Connor, Mary-Frances – Death Studies, 2004
The number of terminally ill prison inmates rises each year. Mental health professionals are uniquely prepared to provide therapy during the end-of-life process with their assessment, training, empathy, and communication skills. This case study examines the six-month therapy of one terminally ill inmate, using a client-centered approach. Drawing…
Descriptors: Therapy, Institutionalized Persons, Pain, Mental Health Workers

Madan-Swain, Avi; And Others – American Journal of Family Therapy, 1993
Examined coping and family adaptation in siblings (n=32) of cancer patients, their ill brothers and sisters (n=19), and control group of nonclinical children (n=10) with healthy siblings. Gender and age of sibling, birth order, and number of siblings were examined. Found better adaptation in larger families and decreased family involvement among…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Adolescents, Cancer, Children