Social Work Practice with the Terminally Ill: A Transcultural PerspectiveJoan K. Parry |
Contents
IntroductionJoan K Parry | 3 |
Chapter | 11 |
Death and Dying Among the American Indians | 23 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Ablon accepted African American Indian ancestor worship Appalachia Appalachians areas attitudes toward death behavior belief systems bereaved Black family Buddhist burial Cambodian cancer caregiver chapter Charla Chinese patients Chinese-Americans church Confucianism coping customs death and dying deceased discussion disease doctor Dogon dying person emotional ethnic groups Euro-American expected experience express family members feelings friends funeral service grief grieving he/she his/her family Hispanic hospital immigrants individual intervention Issei Japan Japanese culture Japanese funeral Japanese-Americans Jewish Kalish Kibbutz Kubler-Ross living loss loved Maimonides mainstream medicine Mexican Mexican-Americans Mindel mother mourners mourning Native American Nisei nursing home pain percent perspective population Puerto Rican terminally relatives religious responsibility Rican terminally ill rituals role Samoan San Jose says Shinto sick sister social worker society Souls Day stress Taoism terminally ill client terminally ill person tion traditional United values Vietnamese Western York