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Death Studies74
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Showing 31 to 45 of 74 results Save | Export
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Gibson, Joan; Gallagher, Mary; Jenkins, Mary – Death Studies, 2010
Suicide among young people has become a growing concern in life in the 21st century and is a tragedy faced by an increasing number of families and in particular parents. This study set out to focus on the experiences of parents reentering the workplace following the death of a child by suicide. Although the immediate aftermath of experiencing…
Descriptors: Suicide, Death, Coping, Adjustment (to Environment)
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Sanders, Sara; Butcher, Howard K.; Swails, Peggy; Power, James – Death Studies, 2009
The purpose of this study was to investigate how caregivers respond to the end stages of dementia with the assistance from hospice. Data were collected from 27 family caregivers over the course of 10 months, with each caregiver being interviewed up to 4 times during the time that the patient received hospice care. Chart review data were also…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Dementia, Caregivers, Diseases
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Balk, David E. – Death Studies, 2008
The author argues that the term "recovery" aptly describes the trajectory following the bereavement of most persons. While the term "resilience" has gained ascendancy in the thanatology literature and the term "recovery" has been dismissed as inappropriate to denote responses over time to being bereaved, the irony is that all dictionaries of the…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Definitions, Coping
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Hui, Victoria Ka-Ying; Fung, Helene H. – Death Studies, 2009
Fear of dying and death may be universal, but individuals differ in their emotional reactions to dying and death. The present study included a sample of 133 Chinese university students who were Christians. The authors tested a mediation model which posited that intrinsic religiosity, but not extrinsic religiosity, lowered anxiety toward the dying…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Death, Fear, Anxiety
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Edwards, Shane; McCreanor, Tim; Ormsby, Manga; Tuwhangai, Nick; Tipene-Leach, David – Death Studies, 2009
The loss of a baby is always hard to cope with and the grieving process is likely to be difficult. Interventions to work with Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) families have improved grieving outcomes for many but the needs of Maori fathers are not well understood or catered to by existing services. This article presents narrative data from…
Descriptors: Grief, Infant Mortality, Fathers, Cultural Influences
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Roos, Susan – Death Studies, 2007
The author reviews "Rainbow in the Stone: Selected Poems," by Robert A. Neimeyer, showing its relevance to the field of thanatology. Most applicable to "Death Studies" readers are the poems from the "Lessons of Loss" section which express the language of loss and deep emotion. The reviewer finds the poem "Visitor" most poignant in its description…
Descriptors: Patients, Death, Coping, Poetry
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Bachner, Yaacov G.; O'Rourke, Norm; Carmel, Sara – Death Studies, 2011
Previous research suggests that caregivers and terminally ill patients face substantial difficulties discussing illness and death. Existing research, however, has focused primarily on the experience of patients. The current study compared responses as well as the relative strength of association between mortality communication, fear of death, and…
Descriptors: Cancer, Caregivers, Patients, Psychology
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McFerran, Katrina; Roberts, Melina; O'Grady, Lucy – Death Studies, 2010
Qualitative investigations have indicated that music therapy groups may be beneficial for bereaved teenagers. The existing relationship between young people and music serves as a platform for connectedness and emotional expression that is utilised within a therapeutic, support group format. This investigation confirms this suggestion through…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Grief, Focus Groups, Adolescents
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Botella, C.; Osma, J.; Palacios, A. Garcia; Guillen, V.; Banos, R. – Death Studies, 2008
This is the first work exploring the application of new technologies, concretely virtual reality, to facilitate emotional processing in the treatment of Complicated Grief. Our research team has designed a virtual reality environment (EMMA's World) to foster the expression and processing of emotions. In this study the authors present a description…
Descriptors: Grief, Computer Simulation, Counseling Techniques, Emotional Response
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Brennan, Michael – Death Studies, 2008
This article reports empirical research into public books of condolence signed following two key mourning events within British culture: the 1989 Hillsborough soccer stadium disaster and the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. The author suggests that not only do condolence books provide valuable historical record of the way contemporary…
Descriptors: Grief, Foreign Countries, Death, Coping
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Brown, Elissa J.; Amaya-Jackson, Lisa; Cohen, Judith; Handel, Stephanie; De Bocanegra, Heike Thiel; Zatta, Eileen; Goodman, Robin F.; Mannarino, Anthony – Death Studies, 2008
This study evaluated the construct of childhood traumatic grief (CTG) and its correlates through a multi-site assessment of 132 bereaved children and adolescents. Youth completed a new measure of the characteristics, attributions, and reactions to exposure to death (CARED), as well as measures of CTG, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD),…
Descriptors: Grief, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Caregivers, Children
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Barnes, Donna Holland; Lawal-Solarin, Foluso Williams; Lester, David – Death Studies, 2007
There has been no published study on personal letters written before an individual's suicidal death hitherto, although studies have been done using diaries. The purpose of this study was to search for trends in the use of particular linguistic categories in a series of personal letters written before an individual's suicidal death. A linguistic…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Diaries, Suicide, Coping
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Riley, Linda P.; LaMontagne, Lynda L.; Hepworth, Joseph T.; Murphy, Barbara A. – Death Studies, 2007
Conceptualizing parental grief as a psychosocial transition, this cross-sectional study of bereaved mothers (N = 35) examined the relationship of dispositional factors, grief reactions, and personal growth. More optimistic mothers reported less intense grief reactions and less distress indicative of complicated grief. Additionally, mothers who…
Descriptors: Mothers, Coping, Grief, Death
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Starks, Helene; Back, Anthony L.; Pearlman, Robert A.; Koenig, Barbara A.; Hsu, Clarissa; Gordon, Judith R.; Bharucha, Ashok J. – Death Studies, 2007
When patients pursue a hastened death, how is the labor of family caregiving affected? The authors examined this question in a qualitative study of 35 families. Four cases reveal the main themes: "taking care" included mutual protection between patients and family members; "midwifing the death" without professional support left families unprepared…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Older Adults, Patients, Counseling Psychology
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Mosher, Catherine E.; Danoff-Burg, Sharon – Death Studies, 2007
In a study designed to examine correlates of cancer-related stigma, 405 college students were assigned randomly to listen to an audiotaped interview in which the target's cancer type and smoking status were manipulated. In the lung cancer conditions, target gender also was manipulated. Social distance and emotional responses differed according to…
Descriptors: Death, Cancer, Anxiety, Smoking
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