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Death Studies, 2013
Acts of deadly violence give rise to powerful emotions and trigger pre-programmed responses that often cause affected persons, including leaders, media, armed forces, and the general public, to act in ways that aggravate the situation and feed into cycles of violence. In this article, a model of the cycle of violence is presented that facilitates…
Descriptors: Violence, Conflict, Death, Causal Models
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García, Jesus A.; Landa, Victor; Grandes, Gonzalo; Pombo, Haizea; Mauriz, Amaia – Death Studies, 2013
Thirty-one family physicians, from 19 primary care teams in Biscay (Spain), were randomly assigned to intervention or control group. The 15 intervention family physicians, after training in primary bereavement care, saw 43 widows for 7 sessions, from the 4th to 13th month after their loss. The 16 control family physicians, without primary…
Descriptors: Grief, Coping, Death, Widowed
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Iwelunmor, Juliet; Airhihenbuwa, Collins O. – Death Studies, 2012
Over 1.8 million people have died of AIDS in South Africa, and it continues to be a death sentence for many women. The purpose of this study was to examine the broader context of death and loss from HIV/AIDS and to identify the cultural factors that influenced existing beliefs and attitudes. The participants included 110 women recruited from 3…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Females, Focus Groups, Foreign Countries
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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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Wolchik, Sharlene A.; Ma, Yue; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Sandler, Irwin N.; Ayers, Tim S. – Death Studies, 2008
We investigated whether 3 self-system beliefs--fear of abandonment, coping efficacy, and self-esteem--mediated the relations between stressors and caregiver-child relationship quality and parentally bereaved youths' general grief and intrusive grief thoughts. Cross-sectional (n = 340 youth) and longitudinal (n = 100 youth) models were tested. In…
Descriptors: Grief, Caregivers, Parent Child Relationship, Coping
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Goodman, Robin F.; Brown, Elissa J. – Death Studies, 2008
September 11, 2001 was a tragedy unparalleled in the United States, resulting in the largest number of parentally bereaved children from a single terrorist incident. The event necessitated swift and sensitive development of programs to meet the needs of bereaved children and their families, and it offered a rare opportunity to investigate the…
Descriptors: Grief, Research Projects, Caregivers, Program Development
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Lasker, Judith N.; Toedter, Lori J. – Death Studies, 1994
Conducted longitudinal study of 194 women and men who experienced miscarriage, ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth, or newborn death to examine recommended interventions. Subjects were more satisfied if they had experienced intervention than if they had not, but having experienced more total interventions was not associated with lower grief or greater…
Descriptors: Death, Hospitals, Intervention, Parents
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Hung, Natalie C.; Rabin, Laura A. – Death Studies, 2009
The experience of bereavement by parental suicide is not well understood, as evidenced by the lack of empirically supported interventions for this underserved population. This article reviews quantitative and qualitative research on the psychopathological outcomes and thematic characteristics of childhood and adolescent suicide survivorship and…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, Family Relationship, Grief, Qualitative Research
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Shapiro, Ester R. – Death Studies, 2008
This article explores the concept of recovery in the wake of a loved one's death, using a cultural and developmental systems approach to understanding child, adult, and family bereavement outcomes as evolving, interdependent adaptive responses to changed circumstances of development within highly specific contexts in intergenerational time and…
Descriptors: Intervention, Ethics, Grief, Psychopathology
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Zucker, Arthur – Death Studies, 2005
Should ethicists decide whether someone lives or dies? Is deciding whether someone lives or dies a decision like deciding whether one car is better at cornering than another? Put another way, is the term "?ethicist"? misleading? Does it assume (without argument) that there is a discipline, ethics, that is like the discipline, physics? So that,…
Descriptors: Ethics, Death, Laws, Legal Responsibility
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Matthews, Laura T.; Marwit, Samuel J. – Death Studies, 2004
Recently, considerable attention has been given to the cognitive processes entailed in mourning. There has been a growing understanding that the death of a loved one forces individuals to restructure and rebuild previously held assumptions about the self and the world. On the basis of this conceptualization of grief as a period of meaning…
Descriptors: Therapy, Intervention, Cognitive Processes, Death
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Williams, Marcia; Frangesch, Bette – Death Studies, 1995
Describes a holistic nursing intervention instituted in a hospital emergency department that focused on meeting the needs of grieving survivors at the time of death notification. The purpose of the intervention was to provide a supportive link in which listening, crisis intervention, grief symptom normalization, and community referral were…
Descriptors: Bereavement, Death, Family (Sociological Unit), Grief
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Chan, Cecilia L. W.; Chow, Amy Y. M.; Ho, Samuel M. Y.; Tsui, Yenny K. Y.; Tin, Agnes F.; Koo, Brenda W. K.; Koo, Elaine W. K. – Death Studies, 2005
This study explores the bereavement process of Chinese persons in Hong Kong, with the focus on how they make meaning of the death as well as how they maintain a bond with the deceased. A review of video- and audiotapes of 52 bereaved persons in bereavement counseling pointed to how these concepts are reflected in key themes that appeared…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Asian Culture, Death, Grief
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Kaufman, Kenneth R.; Endres, Jennifer K.; Kaufman, Nathaniel D. – Death Studies, 2007
Conversion disorders, the physical expression of unresolved psychological pain, can be associated with mourning. This case report is third in a series of articles by the authors on childhood mourning reflecting the effects of multiple losses (K. R. Kaufman & N. D. Kaufman, 2005; K. R. Kaufman & N. D. Kaufman, 2006). In this case report, perception…
Descriptors: Motor Vehicles, Accident Prevention, Children, Adolescents
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Malkinson, Ruth; Rubin, Simon Shimshon; Witztum, Eliezer – Death Studies, 2006
Psychological intervention with the bereaved can provide critical assistance to individuals, families, and communities contending with the loss of significant others. In the organizational paradigm of the Two-Track Model of Bereavement, the outcome of both successful and problematic mourning are manifest along two distinct but interrelated tracks…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Interpersonal Relationship, Models
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