Death, Grief, and Caring RelationshipsBrooks/Cole Publishing Company, 1985 - 350 pages |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 49
Page 148
... aware of his or her prognosis and is able to discuss the dying process or impending death , or to plan in terms of dying and death , with both health caretakers and family members and friends . Since each of the parties is aware of the ...
... aware of his or her prognosis and is able to discuss the dying process or impending death , or to plan in terms of dying and death , with both health caretakers and family members and friends . Since each of the parties is aware of the ...
Page 151
... aware . One investigator , using careful personal observations , noted that nearly half the patients diagnosed as terminally ill overtly mentioned being aware of their prognosis ; another sizable group avoided speaking of their future ...
... aware . One investigator , using careful personal observations , noted that nearly half the patients diagnosed as terminally ill overtly mentioned being aware of their prognosis ; another sizable group avoided speaking of their future ...
Page 161
... aware that the suicide attempt is not supposed to cause death , or he may be unaware . So he swallows a bottle of sleeping pills in a motel room three miles from his family , then telephones them to say " I won't bother you any more . I ...
... aware that the suicide attempt is not supposed to cause death , or he may be unaware . So he swallows a bottle of sleeping pills in a motel room three miles from his family , then telephones them to say " I won't bother you any more . I ...
Table des matières
PART ONE THE MEANING OF DEATH | 1 |
SOURCES OF INFORMATION | 15 |
THE REST OF THE BOOK | 22 |
Droits d'auteur | |
32 autres sections non affichées
Expressions et termes fréquents
adults anger asked attitudes avoid aware become behavior believe bereaved biological immortality body cancer caretakers causes of death child clinical death concern course dead person death and dying death anxiety death education death fears death-related denial depression develop died discuss dying person dying process elderly Elisabeth Kübler-Ross emotional euthanasia example existence experience express family members father fear of death fears and anxieties feelings friends funeral directors grief guilt Hospice care hospital illness important individual infant Kalish & Reynolds Kastenbaum kind Kübler-Ross LeShan live loss meaning near-death experiences nonpersons nursing older persons Omega pain parents patients perhaps physical physician possible probably professional psychiatrist psychological psychotherapy relationship religious response rience right to die role schizophrenia significant social someone sometimes spouse stages stress suicide survivors talk tion widows wish 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 |