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Showing 91 to 105 of 140 results Save | Export
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Benoliel, Jeanne Quint – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1988
Identifies three major areas of concern in relationship between health care providers and dying patients: (1) nature of difficulties and stresses associated with terminal care; (2) education of providers for work; and (3) influence of organizational structure and institutionalized values on services for dying patients and families. Reviews…
Descriptors: Death, Health Personnel, Hospices (Terminal Care), Interpersonal Relationship
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Wilkinson, H. Jean; Wilkinson, John W. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1987
Hospice patient/family volunteers responded to personality questionnaires prior to training and to measures of death understanding and coping before and after training. Results showed that the volunteers were relatively low in anxiety, internally controlled, and empathetic before training. Following training, volunteers reported better…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Coping, Death, Empathy
Moore, Penelope J.; Hazell, LaVone V.; Honeyghan, Edna M. – 2001
Bereavement educators, counselors, clergy, and other specialists have observed that African Americans tend to under-utilize end-of-life palliative care services and general bereavement resources. The literature suggests that involving clergy in outreach to the African American community may be a viable strategy for developing bereavement supports.…
Descriptors: Bereavement, Blacks, Church Role, Churches
Doyle, Kathleen; Kukowski, Thomas – Health Education (Washington D.C.), 1989
The therapeutic use of animals with specific populations has gained increased attention and interest. Pet placement in special settings such as prisons, mental institutions and hospices have shown beneficial results. Development of a pet visitation program requires specific planning and organization. (JD)
Descriptors: Emotional Adjustment, Health Needs, Hospices (Terminal Care), Institutionalized Persons
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Viney, Linda L.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1994
Compared quality of life of terminal cancer patients (n=182) in two palliative care units with that of those in general hospital. Patients in specialized palliative care units were found to differ from those dying in hospital, showing less indirectly expressed anger but more positive feelings. They also reported more anxiety about death but less…
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Foreign Countries, Hospices (Terminal Care)
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Kastenbaum, Robert – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1993
Presents interview with Dame Cicely Saunders, founder of international hospice care movement. Saunders describes her background and experiences that led her to form the hospice movement and discusses the need for pain control for terminally ill patients. Saunders also notes her opposition to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. (NB)
Descriptors: Cancer, Death, Helping Relationship, Hospices (Terminal Care)
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Wetle, Terrie; Shield, Renee; Teno, Joan; Miller, Susan C.; Welch, Lisa – Gerontologist, 2005
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to expand knowledge regarding end-of-life care received in nursing homes through the use of narrative interviews with family members close to the decedents. Design and Methods: We conducted follow-up qualitative interviews with 54 respondents who had participated in an earlier national survey of 1,578…
Descriptors: Family Attitudes, Nursing Homes, Hospices (Terminal Care), Older Adults
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Maierman, Naomi – Educational Leadership, 1997
Overburdened guidance counselors and school psychologists cannot devote enough time to every student in pain. Some schools provide grief training for teachers, because these front-liners are uniquely positioned to guide grieving students and their classmates. After training in a Kids Grieve Too or a community hospice program, teachers more easily…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Response, Grief, Hospices (Terminal Care)
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Reese, Dona J.; Sontag, Mary-Ann – Health & Social Work, 2001
Despite the holistic approach inherent in the hospice philosophy, social work may be viewed as ancillary to medicine. Social work, in turn, may lack sensitivity about other professions' expertise and values and therefore be unprepared to collaborate across cultural boundaries between professions. This article outlines the barriers and proposes…
Descriptors: Cooperation, Death, Hospices (Terminal Care), Interdisciplinary Approach
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Lambert, Heather C.; McColl, Mary Ann; Gilbert, Julie; Wong, Jiahui; Murray, Gale; Shortt, Samuel E. D. – Gerontologist, 2005
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe factors contributing to the decision-making processes of elderly persons as they formulate advance directives in long-term care. Design and Methods: This study was qualitative, based on grounded theory. Recruitment was purposive and continued until saturation was reached. Nine residents of a…
Descriptors: Health Personnel, Decision Making, Hospices (Terminal Care), Older Adults
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Kwak, Jung; Haley, William E. – Gerontologist, 2005
Purpose: We reviewed the research literature on racial or ethnic diversity and end-of-life decision making in order to identify key findings and provide recommendations for future research. Design and Methods: We identified 33 empirical studies in which race or ethnicity was investigated as either a variable predicting treatment preferences or…
Descriptors: Race, Values, Minority Groups, Acculturation
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Lander, Dorothy A.; Napier, Susan D.; Fry, Barb F.; Brander, Heather; Acton, Janice – Convergence, 2005
In this article, the authors explore the creative and expressive arts, specifically "memoirs of loss" as a healing resource that both engenders hope and love and meaning-filled care, and emancipatory and humanist popular education. The authors present some key definitions and the general background to this article's creation. Then, they…
Descriptors: Caregivers, Intimacy, Art, Popular Education
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Van Vorst, Rebecca F.; Crane, Lori A.; Barton, Phoebe Lindsey; Kutner, Jean S.; Kallail, K. James; Westfall, John M. – Journal of Rural Health, 2006
Context: Barriers to providing optimal palliative care in rural communities are not well understood. Purpose: To identify health care personnel's perceptions of the care provided to dying patients in rural Kansas and Colorado and to identify barriers to providing optimal care. Methods: An anonymous self-administered survey was sent to health care…
Descriptors: Patients, Hospices (Terminal Care), Rural Areas, Health Personnel
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Kayser-Jones, Jeanie S.; Kris, Alison E.; Miaskowski, Christine A.; Lyons, William L.; Paul, Steven M. – Gerontologist, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate pain management among 42 hospice and 65 non-hospice residents in two proprietary nursing homes. Design and Methods: In this prospective, anthropological, quantitative, and qualitative study, we used participant observation, event analysis, and chart review to obtain data. The Medication…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Nursing Homes, Pain, Participant Observation
Fraenkel, William A. – 1990
One clinical psychologist who worked with terminally ill, end-stage Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) patients in a hospice type setting experienced more than 150 deaths over an 18-month time period. Many of the patients denied that they had AIDS; some distinguished between having AIDS and testing positive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Clinical Psychology, Counseling, Death
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