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Showing 106 to 120 of 272 results Save | Export
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Connelly, R. J. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1990
Presents sentiment argument, distinguishing artificial feeding from medical treatments which may be discontinued when there is little hope of recovery. Describes probable origins of feelings about food and drink and shows that such feelings cannot be transferred without distortion to the hospital world. Argues that authentic sentiment seems to…
Descriptors: Death, Diseases, Ethics, Food
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Groth-Marnat, Gary – Psychology: A Journal of Human Behavior, 1988
Used Hall and Van de Castle dream content scales to score 104 dreams from 9 terminally ill patients. Found subjects had significantly fewer characters, activities, interactions, color descriptions, and less emotional content in their dreams than physically healthy subjects. Dream content suggests adaptive withdrawal and process of social and…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Death, Fantasy, Foreign Countries
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Humphry, Derek – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1992
Contends that old age, in and of itself, should never need to be a cause for self-destruction. Further argues that suicide and assisted suicide carried out in the face of terminal illness causing unbearable suffering should be ethically and legally acceptable. Outlines a perspective on rational suicide among the elderly. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Death, Decision Making, Euthanasia, Older Adults
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Swensen, Clifford H.; Fuller, Steffen R. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1992
Couples in which one spouse had terminal cancer reported expressions of love, marriage problems, and commitment to each other after diagnosis of cancer and before diagnosis. Cancer group reported expressing more love to each other after diagnosis and more love than comparison group of healthy subjects. Cancer couples were less committed to each…
Descriptors: Cancer, Family Problems, Grief, Love
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Prince, Pamela N.; Hoffmann, Robert F. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1991
Examined 25 dream reports of individuals in Palliative Care Unit. Content analysis of dream reports supports hypothesis that continuity exists between dreaming and waking experience. Results did not indicate that themes of death and aggression, negative emotion, or infant and child characters were more prevalent among the dying. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Death, Dreams, Foreign Countries
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Timmermans, Stefan – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1993
Analyzed how nurses deal with terminal and dying patients in two inpatient wards in Belgian general hospital. Observed that nurses often felt dissatisfied with their terminal caregiving. Suggests terminal care include specific physical, social, religious, and psychological services, given to terminal patient and family, to obtain as high a level…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Foreign Countries, Hospitals, Nurses
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Kellehear, Allan; Lewin, Terry – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1989
Interviewed 100 terminally ill cancer patients to examine farewells made before the interview and those desired and planned but not yet completed. Most patients (81 percent) desired to farewell; most wanted farewell to occur late in course of their dying. Prominent in preferred styles of farewells were the gift, conversation, and letter.…
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Family Relationship, Foreign Countries
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Riordan, Richard J.; Saltzer, Sandra K. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1992
Reviews literature on burnout and its prevention among caregivers to dying. Concludes that health care providers working with dying experience stressors unique to their specialty but also experience stressors common to other health care workers. Summarizes external and internal stressors common to specialty field and offers suggestions for…
Descriptors: Burnout, Caregivers, Death, Health Personnel
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Stephens, Ronald L.; Grady, Rosemary – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1992
Notes that, in survey of 50 cancer patients offered living wills, 6 individuals declined to sign advance directives. Contains detailed evaluation of each of six cases. Discusses potential value of living wills in context of other, newer forms of advance directives, such as durable power of attorney for health care, and more detailed living will…
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Decision Making, Individual Power
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Bigelow, Terry Patrick; Ried, C. A. – English Journal, 2006
The first part of this article recounts the experiences of a language arts teacher, Terry Patrick Bigelow, and his former student, Cynthia (Noyes) Ried, who suffers from Fahr's Syndrome, a neurodegenerative congenital disease that forms calcium deposits deep inside the brain. It is irreversible, inoperable, and incurable. In the first part of the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Middle Schools, Middle School Teachers, Language Arts
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Carr, Deborah; Khodyakov, Dmitry – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2007
Dying persons are encouraged to name as durable power of attorney for health care (DPAHC) someone who will thus be empowered to make end-of-life treatment decisions for them in the event that they become incapacitated. We use data from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study to investigate whether and whom older adults designate as their DPAHC. DPAHC…
Descriptors: Terminal Illness, Decision Making, Empowerment, Death
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Marion, Michelle S.; Range, Lillian M. – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 2003
To see if suicide attitudes might be softened by extenuating circumstances, such as terminal illness, African American and European American women imagined themselves in one of four extenuating circumstances then completed measures of suicide acceptability and religiosity. Both ethnic groups reported a greater likelihood of suicide when imagining…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Blacks, Depression (Psychology), Females
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Martin, Robert W.; Wylie, Norma – Academic Medicine, 1989
A successful seven-day course offered to third-year medical students is an integrated program for teaching them how to deal with terminal illness. The course uses lectures, audiovisual aids, and group and individual sessions to enhance self-awareness and practical application of the material in a clinical setting. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Death, Diseases, Higher Education, Medical Education
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Kiser, Jerry D. – Counseling and Values, 1996
With the shift in Americans' beliefs regarding legalizing physician-assisted suicide for the terminally ill, counselors must be prepared to counsel clients who have decided to end their lives. For counselors to avoid violating the ethical guidelines established by the American Counseling Association (ACA) regarding these clients, a reevaluation of…
Descriptors: Counseling, Euthanasia, Physician Patient Relationship, Self Injurious Behavior
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Lynn, Darcy – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 1995
Recounts personal experiences concerning art therapy as both a lymphoma patient and an artist. A few selections from two periods in the hospital illustrate physical and emotional pain. (JPS)
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Cancer, Diseases, Higher Education
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