Clinical Management of Bereavement: A Handbook for Healthcare ProfessionalsThis manual deals with bereaved families in hospital and clinic settings and provides practical knowledge based on current theory and on clinical experience obtained at several major medical centers. Differential diagnosis between clinical depression and grief reaction is discussed and practical guidelines are given for interventions with survivors including grief situations involving loss of a spouse, of a child and of a parent. |
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Page 57
... normal and pathological grief according to each phase of grief . Despite the above attempts to differentiate between normal and pathological grieving , it is clear that symptoms alone are not sufficient to make the differential ...
... normal and pathological grief according to each phase of grief . Despite the above attempts to differentiate between normal and pathological grieving , it is clear that symptoms alone are not sufficient to make the differential ...
Page 58
... normal grieving . In the Zisook be- reavement studies , the authors suggested a set of guidelines that would identify more clearly the distinction between Major Depression and normal grieving . The following features taken from the ...
... normal grieving . In the Zisook be- reavement studies , the authors suggested a set of guidelines that would identify more clearly the distinction between Major Depression and normal grieving . The following features taken from the ...
Page 65
... Normal and Pathological Grief Phases and Symptoms of Normal Grief A / Shock Numbness , denial , disbelief B / Acute grieving Crying , sobbing , guilt , anger , depression , anorexia , insomnia , irritability , fatigue , empty feeling ...
... Normal and Pathological Grief Phases and Symptoms of Normal Grief A / Shock Numbness , denial , disbelief B / Acute grieving Crying , sobbing , guilt , anger , depression , anorexia , insomnia , irritability , fatigue , empty feeling ...
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 11 |
THE STRESS OF BEREAVEMENT | 17 |
DEFINITIONS AND THEORIES | 28 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accept allowed anger answer approach avoid awareness baby become behavior bereavement cause Chapter child clinical complications concern condition continue coping course dealing death deceased decisions denial depression develop difficult discuss disease dying emotional encourage et al expected experience expression fact factors family members fear feelings friends funeral further give given grief process grieving groups guidelines guilt health professionals hospital important individuals infant intense intervention involved issues Journal later lives loss major Management meaning mother normal nurse occur offer pain parents Parkes pathological patient period person phase physician possible Press prevent problems psychiatric questions reactions referred relationship remain response result role sense setting situation social social worker Sometimes staff stress studies sudden suicide survivors symptoms tend terminal treatment types understand unit usually various viewing widows York