Literature DB >> 26848080

Understanding How Bereaved Parents Cope With Their Grief to Inform the Services Provided to Them.

Moire Stevenson1,2, Marie Achille2, Stephen Liben3, Marie-Claude Proulx3, Nago Humbert3, Antoinette Petti4, Mary Ellen Macdonald3, S Robin Cohen5.   

Abstract

Our objective was to develop a rich description of how parents experience their grief in the first year after the death of their child, and how various bereavement follow-up and support services helped them during this time, with the aim of informing follow-up and support services offered to bereaved parents. Our findings situated parents' individual experiences of coping within the social and institutional contexts in which they grieved. In the first year after the death of their child, parents regulated their intense feelings of grief through loss-oriented, restoration-oriented, and/or meaning reconstruction strategies. Often, parents' relationships with others and many of the bereavement follow-up and support services helped them in this regard. This article also explores how the results may aid service providers in accompanying parents in a way that optimizes outcomes for these parents.

Entities:  

Keywords:  America, North; adolescents/ youth; bereavement/grief; cancer, coping, psychology/psychosocial issues; children; end-of-life issues; families, caregiving; infants; interpretive description; interviews, semistructured; knowledge transfer; palliative care; program evaluation; psychosocial issues; relationships, parent–child; research, clinical; research, qualitative

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26848080     DOI: 10.1177/1049732315622189

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Health Res        ISSN: 1049-7323


  6 in total

1.  Parents' Wishes for What They Had or Had Not Done and Their Coping After Their Infant's or Child's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit/Pediatric Intensive Care Unit/Emergency Department Death.

Authors:  Carmen Caicedo; Dorothy Brooten; JoAnne M Youngblut; Julia Dankanich
Journal:  J Hosp Palliat Nurs       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 1.918

2.  Use of spiritual coping strategies by gender, race/ethnicity, and religion at 1 and 3 months after infant's/child's intensive care unit death.

Authors:  Dawn M Hawthorne; JoAnne M Youngblut; Dorothy Brooten
Journal:  J Am Assoc Nurse Pract       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 1.165

3.  Resilience as a predictive factor towards a healthy adjustment to grief after the loss of a child to cancer.

Authors:  Hilde Kristin Vegsund; Trude Reinfjell; Unni Karin Moksnes; Alexandra Eilegård Wallin; Odin Hjemdal; Mary-Elizabeth Bradley Eilertsen
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-03-21       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 4.  Insight into the content of and experiences with follow-up conversations with bereaved parents in paediatrics: A systematic review.

Authors:  Merel M van Kempen; Eline M Kochen; Marijke C Kars
Journal:  Acta Paediatr       Date:  2022-02-07       Impact factor: 4.056

5.  Seeking an Adjustment from the Unnatural to the Supernatural: The Experience of Losing a Child from Cancer in Colombia.

Authors:  Sonia Carreño-Moreno; Mauricio Arias-Rojas; Lorena Chaparro-Díaz
Journal:  Indian J Palliat Care       Date:  2021-02-17

6.  Differing needs of mothers and fathers during their child's end-of-life care: secondary analysis of the "Paediatric end-of-life care needs" (PELICAN) study.

Authors:  Tanja Leemann; Eva Bergstraesser; Eva Cignacco; Karin Zimmermann
Journal:  BMC Palliat Care       Date:  2020-08-04       Impact factor: 3.234

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.