Death, Grief, and Caring RelationshipsBrooks/Cole Publishing Company, 1985 - 350 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 67
Page 123
... cancer was not a major cause of death a century ago because cancer is largely an illness of the elderly , and most people didn't live long enough to be susceptible to cancer - they died earlier from smallpox or tuberculosis or pneumonia ...
... cancer was not a major cause of death a century ago because cancer is largely an illness of the elderly , and most people didn't live long enough to be susceptible to cancer - they died earlier from smallpox or tuberculosis or pneumonia ...
Page 287
... cancer patients accept responsi- bility for having cancer ; that is , they are told that they have , perhaps uncon- sciously , caused their cancer and , therefore , they also have the power to get rid of the cancer . Part of the ...
... cancer patients accept responsi- bility for having cancer ; that is , they are told that they have , perhaps uncon- sciously , caused their cancer and , therefore , they also have the power to get rid of the cancer . Part of the ...
Page 288
... cancer is diagnosed feel powerless to do anything about it and also fear its outcome ; these feelings increase stress and , thereby , increase the spread of the disease . Perhaps the stress - induced changes inhibit or interfere with ...
... cancer is diagnosed feel powerless to do anything about it and also fear its outcome ; these feelings increase stress and , thereby , increase the spread of the disease . Perhaps the stress - induced changes inhibit or interfere with ...
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 |