Death, Grief, and Caring RelationshipsBrooks/Cole Publishing Company, 1981 - 336 pages |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 15
Page 107
... infant , and my social immortality will be in a museum as an anonymous infant of the twentieth century . Unless you believe in spiritual or psychological immortality , your immortality is likely to be temporary and , therefore , not ...
... infant , and my social immortality will be in a museum as an anonymous infant of the twentieth century . Unless you believe in spiritual or psychological immortality , your immortality is likely to be temporary and , therefore , not ...
Page 141
... infant mortality rate was 100 per 1000 ; by 1970 , it was only two per 1000 ( Marshall , 1980 ) . The large number of infant deaths was one reason families in 1900 tended to have many more pregnancies than families do today . As a ...
... infant mortality rate was 100 per 1000 ; by 1970 , it was only two per 1000 ( Marshall , 1980 ) . The large number of infant deaths was one reason families in 1900 tended to have many more pregnancies than families do today . As a ...
Page 245
... infant died , she was not able to hold a baby for fear that she would cause that baby's death also . A letter written to a crib - death research project exemplifies the guilt a parent feels . When I went to bed that night , I put her in ...
... infant died , she was not able to hold a baby for fear that she would cause that baby's death also . A letter written to a crib - death research project exemplifies the guilt a parent feels . When I went to bed that night , I put her in ...
Table des matières
The Horse on the DiningRoom Table | 2 |
What Is Death? | 27 |
CHAPTER | 43 |
Droits d'auteur | |
17 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
adults anger Anticipatory grief asked avoid awareness become behavior believe bereaved body cancer caring relationships casket causes of death child clinical death concern course dead person death and dying death anxiety death education death fear death-related denial denial of death depressed develop died discussion dying person dying process elderly Elisabeth Kübler-Ross emotional euthanasia example experience expressed family members fear of death fears and anxieties feel frequently friends funeral directors going grief grieving guilt hospital important individual Kalish & Reynolds Kastenbaum kind LeShan live living-dying interval loss meaning Mexican Americans near-death experiences nurse older persons pain parents patient perhaps physical physician possible probably process of dying professional psychological psychotherapy religious response significant social someone Sometimes spouse stress suicide survivors talk Tia's tion told treatment widows wish woman women young
Références à ce livre
Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, Volume 35 Leonard Berkowitz Aucun aperçu disponible - 1964 |
Attachment in Adulthood, First Edition: Structure, Dynamics, and Change Mario Mikulincer,Phillip R. Shaver Aucun aperçu disponible - 2010 |