Dying: Facing the FactsHannelore Wass, Robert A. Neimeyer This work provides an up-to-date examination of the ways people face dying and bereavement. In this third edition previous chapters are throrughly revised, and new contributors expand areas that have changed significantly. Reflecting the field's complex interdisciplinary character, the chapters cover such diverse areas as psychology, nursing, medicine, AIDS, family studies, sociology, education, philosophy, law, religion, the humanities and political science, whilst highlighting thanatology's core psychological and therapeutic caregiving dimensions. First, the text offers broad examinations of death systems from the vantage points of various cultural, historical and disciplinary perspectives. The second section represents the core of the book, offering detailed surveys of the "data" of death, dying and bereavement as they relate to different phases of our encounter with death as an abstract possibility and concrete reality. Next are chapters addressing a cluster of death-related issues and challenges that confront us at both a societal and individual level - such as AIDS - and finally the volume closes with a few reflections on the complexity of contemporary thanatology, framing some issues and recommendations that deserve greater attention by scholars, researchers, policy makers and practitioners. Also included is a comprehensive resource bibliography on the topic. This text is intended to be of use as a resource for all those interested in reading about death studies, both professionals and students alike. |
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... accept our own mortality are perhaps the paramount issues of adult development . Part III of the book addresses a cluster of death - related issues and challenges that confront us at both a societal and individual level . Peterson opens ...
... accepted as part of the meaning of being human. Attention was focused almost entirely on this world and its activities, the activities of a responsible life in a community called to serve God. Death of the Self Perchance he for whom ...
... accepted as part of the meaning of being human . Attention was focused almost entirely on this world and its activities , the activities of a responsible life in a community called to serve God . Death of the Self Perchance he for whom ...
... neigh- borhoods , persons accept the fact that they will see physicians and can afford to purchase vegetables , fruits , and protein substances . In general , the poor experience high mortality rates at LIVING OUR DYING AND OUR GRIEVING 35.
... human community and , in accepting the reality of human limitation , the obligation to surrender the gift of life by the ac- ceptance of death ( Parsons et al . , 1973 , p . 5 ) . The idea of life as a gift is important to 38 J. D. MORGAN.
Contents
3 | |
11 | |
17 | |
34 | |
41 | |
47 | |
Death Anxiety or Death Anxieties? | 58 |
Changes in Death Anxiety as a Result of Death Education | 78 |
Conclusion | 263 |
References | 265 |
Death in the Lives of Children and Adolescents | 269 |
Societal Factors and Forces | 275 |
Personal Encounters with Death | 282 |
Conclusion | 296 |
Responding to the Tolling of the Bell | 303 |
Issues and Challenges | 323 |
The Dying Process | 89 |
The End of the Dying Trajectory | 98 |
Managing Serious Illness | 112 |
A Product of Civilization | 118 |
Different Types of Hospital Dying | 128 |
Negotiations Decisions and Adaptations to Dying | 134 |
The Hospice Approach | 143 |
The Delivery of Hospice Services | 151 |
References | 161 |
Defining Life and Death | 173 |
Conclusion | 182 |
American Funeral Practices and Attitudes Toward Funerals | 193 |
Accommodating to Loss | 211 |
Factors that Influence Grief and Mourning | 221 |
Complicated Mourning | 238 |
Solace | 248 |
Worldviews | 254 |
Coping with HIVSpectrum Disease | 330 |
The Prevention of HIV Transmission | 336 |
Suicide | 347 |
Contemporary Developments in Suicidology | 353 |
TheoreticalClinical Observations | 361 |
Gender | 367 |
Rational Suicide Assisted Suicide | 373 |
A Sample of Suicide Notes | 380 |
Philosophy and the Right to Die | 388 |
Medicine and the Right to Die | 395 |
Conclusion | 402 |
Chapter 17 | 435 |
Education about Death Dying and Bereavement | 441 |
Chapter 18 | 447 |
Organizations | 454 |