Bereaved parents
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Bereaved parents experience higher rates of depressive and post-traumatic stress symptoms after the stillbirth of a baby than after live-birth. Yet, these effects remain underreported in the literature and, consequently, insufficiently addressed in health provider education and practice.
8p vigeorgia2711 30-11-2020 14 2 Download
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The death of a child is a devastating event for parents. In many high income countries, following an unexpected death, there are formal investigations to find the cause of death as part of wider integrated child death review processes.
17p vichengshin2711 29-02-2020 13 1 Download
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A child’s death is an enormous tragedy for both the parents and other family members. Support for the parents can be important in helping them to cope with the loss of their child. In the Netherlands little is known about parents’ experiences of the support they receive after the death of their child.
10p videshiki2711 21-02-2020 13 0 Download
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In many countries there are now detailed Child Death Review (CDR) processes following unexpected child deaths. CDR can lead to a fuller understanding of the causes for each child’s death but this potentially intrusive process may increase the distress of bereaved families.
10p videshiki2711 19-02-2020 15 1 Download
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Postmortem memento photography has emerged in Western hospitals as part of compassionate bereavement care for parents facing perinatal death. Many parents endorse this psychosocial intervention, yet implementation varies greatly and little research on parents’ specific needs guides health care professionals.
10p viriyadh2711 19-12-2019 21 1 Download
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(BQ) Part 2 of the document Palliative care in pediatric has contents: Risk and resilience factors related to parental bereavement following the death of a child with a life-limiting condition, trending longitudinal agreement between parent and child perceptions of quality of life for pediatric palliative care patients,… and other contents.
129p thuongdanguyetan10 09-03-2019 22 2 Download
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This book concerns 88 families and their 157 children who coped with the terminal illness and, ultimately, the death of a parent. It presents a qualitative analysis which complements the quantitative findings reviewed in Chapter 2 of how the families and children responded to these events during the 6 months preceding and the 14 months after the patient died. Five developmentally separable age groups emerged from the data, and the groupings clarified the many ways in which children’s development shaped their responses.
287p cronus75 13-01-2013 61 5 Download