- Results found in: The Exchange
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... and is on the Planning Committee for the University’ s International Conference on Death, Grief and Bereavement.
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... Her clinical area is in Palliative Home Care while the focus of her research is palliative care, grief and loss, and supporting family caregivers during bereavement.
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... specializing in the broad areas of loss and life transition. He was the primary writer for MyGrief. ca (developed with the Canadian Virtual Hospice) which won national innovation awards from the Canadian...
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... children and their families to embrace life each day, even if it is also a place where sadness, grief and loss are simply accepted as part of normal life. Families' and patients' needs We know that no...
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... our experience. Others can be, or at least seem, so joyful when we are so far from being so, our grief so not in the spirit of the season. Many of my own dear friends and a close relative have died this...
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... or clumsy it may be, with their own steps. A leading cause of moral distress and disenfranchised grief among health care workers is boundary confusion which may manifest itself in a health care worker...
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... such as wills and funerals. Members also express difficult feelings such as anger and guilt and grief. This aspect of the groups is particularly valued, as expressed by this participant: "I have friends...
- Results found in: Other
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... the delivery of optimal care. Some people may also share how a particular death touched their own grief history or life situation.) What changes would you make in the way the team or program cares for...
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... include offering bereavement care to the family following the death. It is generally agreed that grief is a normal reaction to loss and most people manage fairly well with no intervention at all. However,...
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... had cared for the deceased. A brief summary of the death or situation follows, and the stress and grief experienced as a result of the death are acknowledged. You can use the following questions to guide...