Academic literature on the topic 'Attitude to death'

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Journal articles on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Lin, Amy Hui-Mei Huang. "Factors Related to Attitudes Toward Death among American and Chinese Older Adults." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 47, no. 1 (2003): 3–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/g66e-f3ud-6rhx-6qqg.

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This study examines the relationship between five dimensions of attitude toward death (fear of death, death avoidance, neutral acceptance of death, approach acceptance of death, and escape acceptance of death) and three selected personal factors (spirituality, emotional support, and religiosity) among American and Chinese older adults. A total of 178 older adults consisting of 91 Americans living in Columbus, Ohio, and surrounding suburban areas, and 87 Chinese living in Taipei, Taiwan, participated in this study. Among Americans, the results reveal that spirituality influences both fear and avoidance of death attitudes, and that spirituality and religiosity contribute to both approach acceptance and escape acceptance of death attitudes. Among Chinese, spirituality influences fear of death attitudes and religiosity influences approach acceptance of death attitudes. For both American and Chinese subjects, neutral acceptance death attitude is not influenced by any selected personal factors and emotional support fails to demonstrate a significant relationship with any death attitude. American and Chinese older adults derive their spirituality in different ways, and their respective religious faiths contribute differently to their attitudes toward death. However, this study clearly indicates that, despite cultural differences, both populations demonstrate that spirituality factor influences the negative dimensions of death attitudes (fear of death and avoidance of death) and the religiosity factor influences the positive dimension of death attitude (acceptance of death).
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Perangin-angin, Mori Agustina, and Gallant Deva Nainggolan. "Sikap Perawat Terhadap Pasien Menjelang Ajal Dan Sikap Terhadap Kematian." Jurnal Smart Keperawatan 7, no. 2 (2020): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.34310/jskp.v7i2.390.

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Merawat pasien menjelang ajal merupakan pengalaman yang kurang menyenangkan bagi perawat karena bisa menimbulkan rasa takut, cemas, sedih dan frustasi. Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah mengetahui hubungan antara sikap perawat pasien menjelang ajal dan sikap terhadap kematian. Metode yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah deskriptif korelasi dengan menggunakan tehnik convinence sampling kepada 95 perawat yang bekerja di Rumah Sakit Advent Bandung. Pengumpulan data dilakukan pada bulan Oktober - November 2019. Untuk mengukur sikap perawat terhadap pasien menjelang ajal digunakan kuesioner Frommelt’s Attitude Toward Care of the Dying (FATCOD) scale. Sedangkan untuk mengukur sikap perawat terhadap kematian digunakan kuesioner Death Attittudes Profile-Revised (DAP-R). Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa sebagian besar perawat memiliki sikap yang negatif terhadap pasien menjelang ajal (dying attitude) yaitu 83% dan 81.1% menunjukkan sikap yang negatif terhadap kematian (death attitude). Hasil uji-t dan uji-F menunjukkan bahwa unit kerja dan pelatihan paliatif mempunyai hubungan yang positif terhadap perawatan menjelang ajal dengan nilai sig< 0.05. Oleh karena itu penulis menyarankan agar perawat diberikan pelatihan tentang perawatan paliatif agar dapat meningkatkan sikap yang positif dalam merawat pasien menjelang ajal dan sikap terhadap kematian. Kata kunci: kematian; menjelang ajal; sikap perawatNURSE’S BEHAVIOR TOWARD DEATH AND DYING PATIENT ABSTRACT Caring for a dying patient is an unpleasant experience because nurses can feel frightened, anxiety, sadness, and frustration. The purpose of this study was to determine the correlation between nurse’s behavior towards death and dying patient. Data collection was conducted from October - November 2019 to 95 nurses at Adven Hospital of Bandung using a convenience sampling technique and descriptive correlation method using Frommelt's Attitude toward Care of the Dying (FATCOD) scale and Death Attitudes Profile-Revised (DAP-R) questionnaire. The results of this study indicate that the majority (87.4 %) of nurses have a negative dying attitude, and 81.1 % of nurses have a negative death attitude. F-test and t-test show that the work unit and palliative training have a significant correlation (sig <0.05) to nurses’ dying attitude. Therefore the authors suggest that nurses need to take palliative training to enhance nurses' positive dying attitudes and death attitudes. Keyword: death; dying; nurse attitude
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Lester, David. "The Lester Attitude toward Death Scale." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 23, no. 1 (1991): 67–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/me86-bpbe-eve3-ma6n.

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This article publishes the Lester Attitude Toward Death Scale for the first time, together with data on its reliability and validity. The scale is different from other fear of death scales in its use of a scaled value approach that permits a measure of inconsistency in attitudes.
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Gerasimova, V. Yu. "Attitude to old age through death attitude." Moscow State University Bulletin. Series 18. Sociology and Political Science, no. 2 (January 1, 2015): 226–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.24290/1029-3736-2015-0-2-226-249.

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Ramsay, Hayden. "Our Attitude Towards Death." New Blackfriars 86, no. 1004 (2005): 418–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0028-4289.2005.00095.x.

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Lim, Song-Ja, and Sun-Hee Song. "Effects of Death Attitude on Death Anxiety." Journal of the Korea Contents Association 12, no. 5 (2012): 243–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.5392/jkca.2012.12.05.243.

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Fradisa, Lisa, Ida Suryati, Kalpana Kartikaa, and Veviola Fitri. "HUBUNGAN PENGETAHUAN PERAWAT TENTANG ARITMIA DENGAN SIKAP PERAWAT DALAM PENANGANAN ARITMIA DI RUANGAN CVCU DAN IGD RSUD DR. ADNAAN WD PAYAKUMBUH." Jurnal Kesehatan Tambusai 2, no. 4 (2021): 302–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.31004/jkt.v2i4.3193.

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Sudden death or commonly known as sudden cardiac death is defined as an unexpected death or death process that is too fast. About 93% of sudden deaths are caused by arrhythmias, meaning that deaths occur due to heart rhythm disturbances that cause blood circulation failure. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between knowledge of nurses about arrhythmias and attitudes of nurses in handling arrhythmias in the CVCU and IGD rooms at Dr. Adnaan WD Payakumbuh. This study uses a descriptive correlation method with a cross sectional approach.. The sample in this study was 34 respondents. The results of the statistical test of univariate analysis showed that the respondents had good knowledge (61.8%) and had a positive attitude (61.8%). The results of the bivariate test showed that there was a relationship between nurses' knowledge about arrhythmias and nurses' attitudes in handling arrhythmias p value = 0.000 (p 0.05). It was concluded that there was a relationship between nurses' knowledge about arrhythmias and nurses' attitudes in handling arrhythmias in the CVCU and IGD rooms at Dr. Adnaan WD Payakumbuh. Therefore, hospitals can provide opportunities for nurses to continue their education and schedule training for nurses who have not attended training and those who have attended training are expected to attend counseling about arrhythmias once a month which aims to increase knowledge and attitude of nurses in the management of arrhythmias.
 Keywords: Knowledge, Arrhythmia Management, Attitude
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Brent, Sandor B., Mark W. Speece, Marie F. Gates, and Manju Kaul. "The Contribution of Death-Related Experiences to Health Care Providers' Attitudes toward Dying Patients: II. Medical and Nursing Students with No Professional Experience." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 26, no. 3 (1993): 181–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/610k-l72x-gj1v-6a4v.

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Beginning medical and nursing students with no professional death-related experience were compared in order to discover the attitudes they bring to their respective careers prior to their professional education and socialization. Hypotheses were derived from psychological models for the effects of professional choice, gender, and non-professional experience on these attitudes. On five of the six attitude measures female nursing students expressed a more positive attitude than cither male or female medical students, as predicted. However, contrary to expectation, the attitudes of the female medical students were not more positive than those of the male medical students on any of these measures. Hours of death-and-dying coursework and general life experience exerted a significant influence on attitudes toward talking to dying patients about death and dying but not on any of the other attitude measures. These data also suggest the existence of an underlying attitude structure, representing these students' Overall Attitude toward caring for dying patients, which remains stable across group differences in professional career choice, gender, and death-related experience. The original theoretical models were enriched and revised in the light of these findings.
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Danaci, Esra. "The effects of occurrence and frequency of nursing students’ confrontation of death on their attitudes towards death." New Trends and Issues Proceedings on Humanities and Social Sciences 4, no. 2 (2017): 275–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.18844/prosoc.v4i2.2758.

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This study was conducted as a descriptive study aiming at determining the effects of the facing death situation and frequency of nursing students on their attitudes towards death.The research was carried out between October 10 and October 21, 2016 with the participation of 233 students who were currently studying in the nursing department of the Faculty of Health Sciences. The data were collected by the 25question questionnaire form prepared by the researchers and determined the demographic characteristics of the students and their attitudes towards death using the Death Attitude Profile-Revised (DAP-R) Scale. As the total scores obtained on the scale increased, it is considered that a more negative attitude is developed towards death. For the data assessment, percentile estimation, Levine test, One Way ANOVA, Tukey test, Mann Whitney U test, and Kruskall Wallis test were used. The present study demonstrated that of the students, 46.4% loved their profession, 59.7% preferred their profession willingly, 36.5% lost a first-degree relative previously, 65.7% faced death situation during clinical practices, 60.1% avoided from facing with the relatives of the deceased individual, and only 21.5% found herself/himself sufficient for understanding the patients’ relatives. The median score of DAP- -161.00), the median score the -72), the median score of the Escape Acceptance subdimension -32), and tha relationship was found amongthe DAP-R scores of the students and their sociodemographic and occupational characteristics and facing death situations (p <0.05). Considering that a negative attitude toward death was developed as the total score of the scale increased, this study revealed that the students did not develop any negative attitudes towards death. Keywords: Nursing, student, death, attitude, frequency of facing death.
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Lynn, Theresa, Amy Curtis, and Mary D. Lagerwey. "Association Between Attitude Toward Death and Completion of Advance Directives." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 74, no. 2 (2016): 193–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0030222815598418.

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Advance directives provide health-care instruction for incapacitated individuals and authorize who may make health-care decisions for that individual. Identified factors do not explain all variance related to advance directive completion. This study was an analysis of an association between advance directive completion and death attitudes. Surveys that included the Death Attitude Profile—Revised were completed anonymously. Comparisons of means, chi-square, and logistic regression tests were conducted. Among individuals who did not consider themselves religious, the mean death avoidance attitude scores differed significantly among those with advance directives (mean = 1.93) and those without (mean = 4.05) as did the mean approach acceptance attitude scores of those with advance directives (mean = 5.73) and those without (mean = 3.71). Among individuals who do consider themselves religious, the mean escape acceptance attitude scores differed significantly among those with advance directives (mean = 5.11) and those without (mean = 4.15). The complicated relationships among religiosity, advance directives, and death attitudes warrant further study.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Ngan, Chiu-wah Daniel. "Relationship between death attitude and suicidal behavior." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2004. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B29760094.

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Busch, Brendan. "The Changing Nature of Death Qualification and its Interaction with Attitude Salience." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2018. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/1892.

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Death qualification is a problematic aspect of capital trials, as death qualified jurors have higher conviction rates than non-death qualified jurors. The current study examines whether the death qualification process itself affects juror decision-making via attitude salience effects. Participants (n=90) recruited from the venire juror pool at the Santa Ana Superior Court were asked to read a trial transcript and decide guilt or innocence and whether they would sentence the defendant to death. Half of the participants were given a survey determining death qualification before they read the trial (making death qualification salient), while the other half were given the survey at the end of the study (not salient condition). Although the results do not support the theory that the death qualification process biases jurors’ verdict and sentencing decisions, they do suggest that the proportion, attitudes, and demographics of non-death qualified jurors have changed substantially since initial research on death qualification was undertaken.
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Board, Virginia E. "Semper Fi: How Images of Death in NCIS Affect Attitude Change." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32724.

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This pre-test, post- test experiment examined the effects of mortality salience, frames of the military and military personnel, and regulatory focus on viewer attitudes toward the military, support for the military, and their perceptions of military personnelâ s criminal behavior. Participants viewed a short video clip from an episode of NCIS which contained either a sympathetic or non-sympathetic frame of the military and, in the treatment condition, a mortality salience reminder. Frame (sympathetic or non-sympathetic) had a significant effect on participant attitudes toward the military in the control condition when there was no mortality salience reminder present in the video clip. However, when participantsâ mortality was made salient, attitudes and support for the military did not change. Theoretical and practical implications and suggestions for future research are discussed.<br>Master of Arts
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Gottfried, Gretchen Karr 1955. "Clinicians' perceptions about death anxiety and end-of-life clinical decision making for persons over 65." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/558203.

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Dood, Tiffany Lee. "Dead-set against it? thoughts of death can promote resistance to attitude change." Thesis, Montana State University, 2007. http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2007/dood/DoodT0507.pdf.

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Thiessen, Janice G. "A phenomenological study of parents’ experience following stillbirth or early infant death." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 1985. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24424.

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This study was designed to discover parents' experience following a stillbirth or early infant death. The conceptualization of the research problem was based on Kleinman's (1978) cultural system model which directed the researcher to elicit directly from clients their explanatory models, or their way of viewing the experience. The specific research questions were (1) How do couples perceive and interpret their experience following stillbirth or early infant death? and (2) How do couples view the social support they have received at the time of their infant's death? Six couples, who were recruited primarily from bereavement support groups, participated in the study. Each couple had experienced a stillbirth or early infant death between four months and four years prior to the study. Data were collected from the subjects with the use of unstructured interviews, allowing the experiences to unfold as they were perceived by the participants. Four main themes that evolved from the data were (1) anticipation of parenthood and the shattering of hopes with the death or knowledge of impending death of the infant; (2) a multidimensional personal grief experience; (3) an interpersonal grief exerience influenced by the social support of health care professionals, of friends and family and of the spouse; and (4) reflection and search for meaning in the experience. The discovery of couples' perceptions of their bereavement experience and their view of the support received will assist in enhancing the ability to provide more effective nursing care to bereaved families. Implications for nursing practice, research and education are delineated.<br>Applied Science, Faculty of<br>Nursing, School of<br>Graduate
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Lussier, Stephen Gerard. "Counselor perspectives on suicide and suicidal ideation a qualitative study /." [Gainesville, Fla.] : University of Florida, 2004. http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/UFE0004568.

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Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Florida, 2004.<br>Typescript. Title from title page of source document. Document formatted into pages; contains 212 pages. Includes Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Säflund, Karin. "An analysis of parents' experiences and the caregivers' role following the birth of a stillborn child /." Stockholm, 2003. http://diss.kib.ki.se/2003/91-7349-594-8/.

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McGaffic, Cheryl Mallernee. "Patterns of spirituality and health among aging adults and dying adults living in the community." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/187408.

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This research tests and refines a middle range theoretical model about unitary developmental patterns in aging adults and dying adults. The primary aim was to explore the relationships among four unitary patterns of Health (power, personal death awareness, perceived symptoms in transition, and well-being) and three unitary patterns of Spirituality (self-transcendence, spiritual perspective, and meaning and purpose in life and death). A secondary aim was to explore the personal meanings of death for participants. A descriptive, cross-sectional design was used to answer the research questions. The sample was composed of 35 aging adults and 35 dying adults. Descriptive statistics were used to examine relationships among demographic and study variables. Relationships among variables were explored using bivariate and canonical correlational analysis. Content analysis was used to describe the meaning of death paragraphs. Analysis of variance and covariance was used to describe differences between the groups. Dying adults had greater death awareness than aging adults. There were no differences between the two groups for the other three patterns of Health. There were no differences in self-transcendence or meaning and purpose in life and death. Differences in spiritual perspective were gender-related, aging men having less spiritual perspective than aging women, dying men, or dying women. Different patterns of relationships were identified for each group. Greater purpose and self-transcendence were positively associated with greater well-being, more positive and fewer negative symptoms in transition, and more power for aging adults. For dying adults, less purpose, self-transcendence, and spiritual perspective were associated with less well-being, less positive and more negative symptoms, less power and more death awareness. Moderate or high scores were obtained on instruments measuring power, well-being, self-transcendence, spiritual perspective, and purpose in life. Both groups attributed positive evaluations, acceptance, and self-transcendence to meanings of death. This research enhances understanding of the potential for personal transformation and ongoing development in persons facing death. It also provides direction for nursing care in terms of fostering a sense of purpose in life, promoting spiritual expression, and assisting identification of patterns of power, symptoms in transition, and death awareness.
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丹下, 智香子, та Chikako Tange. "宗教性と死に対する態度". 名古屋大学大学院教育発達科学研究科, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/2237/7535.

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Books on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Settar, S. Inviting death: Indian attitude towards the ritual death. Brill, 1989.

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Langwith, Jacqueline. Death and dying. Greenhaven Press, 2008.

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Mora, José Ferrater. El ser y la muerte: Bosquejo de filosofía integracionista. Alianza, 1988.

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E, Petty Richard, Fazio Russell H, and Brinol Pablo, eds. Attitudes: Insights from the new implicit measures. Psychology Press, 2008.

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Ariès, Philippe. The hour of our death. Oxford University Press, 1991.

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Liebermann, Susan Abel. Death, dying and dessert: Reflections on twenty questions about dying. Casa de Palabras, 2013.

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Wober, Mallory. Windows on tragedy: Viewers' attitude to two programmes portraying death. Independent Television Commission, 1991.

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Sandman, Lars. A good death: On the value of death and dying. Open University Press, 2005.

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D, DeFrain John, ed. Stillborn: The invisible death. Lexington Books, 1986.

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Geoffrey, Haddock, and Maio Gregory R, eds. Contemporary perspectives on the psychology of attitudes: The Cardiff Symposium. Psychology Press, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Said, Walaa. "The Metamorphosis of the Significance of Death in Revolutionary Times: Mohammad Rabie’s Otared (2014)." In Re-Configurations. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31160-5_15.

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Zusammenfassung Although the rate of violence and death in Egyptian public places have increased dramatically since January 25, 2011, death and mourning have been dismissed from the focus of Tahrir writing, which is inclined to receive the eventful day and its aftermath through euphoric lens. As a counter-response, the rising wave of dystopian novels has flourished to provide a more confrontational attitude toward death as an inherent component of the revolutionary act. This chapter tackles the theme of violent death and its reflections in dystopian novels, with a close reading of Muḥammad Rabīʿ’s ʿUṭārid (2014).
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Camassa, Manuel. "Empathy and the Importance of Affectivity." In On the Power and Limits of Empathy. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-37522-4_14.

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AbstractThis chapter argues that empathy is the basic emotional mechanism we use to understand others and that is always in place. The idea that we are guided by an objective attitude in interpersonal relationships is confuted and, on the opposite, it is illustrated how empathy makes visible the notion of import in the moral field and calls for a participatory attitude. The case of death penalty is examined to provide an explanation for the transformative power of empathy regarding our understanding of moral values.
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Carrick, Paul. "Attitudes Toward Death." In Philosophy and Medicine. Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-5235-5_3.

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Francis, Leslie J., Ursula McKenna, and Abdullah Sahin. "Religion, Human Rights and Matters of Life and Death: Exploring Attitude Toward Abortion and Euthanasia Among Adolescents in England and Wales." In Euthanasia, Abortion, Death Penalty and Religion - The Right to Life and its Limitations. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98773-6_6.

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Anthony, Francis-Vincent, and Carl Sterkens. "Religion and the Right to (Dispose of) Life: A Study of the Attitude of Christian, Muslim and Hindu Students in India Concerning Death Penalty, Euthanasia and Abortion." In Euthanasia, Abortion, Death Penalty and Religion - The Right to Life and its Limitations. Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-98773-6_2.

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Vollum, Scott. "Attitudes Toward the Death Penalty." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research. Springer Netherlands, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0753-5_4009.

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Vollum, Scott. "Attitudes Toward the Death Penalty." In Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-17299-1_4009.

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Gaston, Bruce. "Tobermory." In Saki (H.H. Munro). Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0365.03.

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During a dull country house weekend Cornelius Appin, a guest about whom the others know little, reveals that he has spent years researching whether animals can learn to talk and that he has achieved great success with his hosts’ cat Tobermory. When the sceptical house guests investigate, they find that not only is Tobermory capable of conducting a conversation but also that he is worrying indiscreet about private matters he has seen or overheard. In panic, they decide Tobermory will have to be done away with before he can reveal more of their secrets. Appin protests against this attitude towards his scientific breakthrough but is overruled. Poison is prepared but Tobermory does not appear that night for his dinner. The next morning his body is brought in: he has apparently been killed fighting a neighbour’s cat. An epilogue notes the death a few weeks later of a man called Cornelius, killed in Dresden zoo by an elephant.
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Morasso, G., F. Cianfriglia, N. Crotti, F. De Falco, and M. Tamburrini. "Physician’s Attitudes in the Management of Terminally Ill Patients." In A Safer Death. Springer US, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-8359-2_28.

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"GENERAL ATTITUDE TOWARD THE CORPSE." In Death Customs. Routledge, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203040966-14.

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Conference papers on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Akvan, Mohammad, and Mahmood Seyyed. "DEATH AND IMMORALITY IN AVICENNA’S PHILOSOPHICAL ATTITUDE." In 22nd International Academic Conference, Lisbon. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/iac.2016.022.003.

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Zhang, Hengliang. "The Death of Septimus and Virginia Woolf’s Attitude Towards Rationality." In 2020 International Conference on Language, Communication and Culture Studies (ICLCCS 2020). Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210313.067.

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Ahn, Young-Mi, Ju-Young Ha, So-Hee Kim, and Hye-Young Choi. "Attitude toward Death and the Purpose in Life among Korean Adolescents." In Healthcare and Nursing 2015. Science & Engineering Research Support soCiety, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.14257/astl.2015.116.41.

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Tian, Changhong. "Study on Chuang Tzu's Attitude towards Death and Its Practical Significance." In 2017 3rd International Conference on Economics, Social Science, Arts, Education and Management Engineering (ESSAEME 2017). Atlantis Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/essaeme-17.2017.143.

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Krupchanov, A. "THE THEME OF DEATH IN THE LITERARY WORKS OF YU.M. POLYAKOV." In VIII International Conference “Russian Literature of the 20th-21st Centuries as a Whole Process (Issues of Theoretical and Methodological Research)”. LCC MAKS Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m3742.rus_lit_20-21/265-269.

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The themes of life and death, love and death, creativity and death, social upheavals and death are key in the writer's work. In the early period of his work, for example, in the novella One Hundred Days Before the Order (1980, published 1987), the final scene does not give a verydefinite answer - the soldier found in the ditch is either asleep or dead. The final remains open. In the works of the 1990s, the theme of death can be resolved both satirically (The Goat in the Milk (1994, published 1995)), tragic (The Sky of the Fallen (1997)) and dramatic (The Voroshilovsky Rifleman (1999)). At the turn of the 2000s and in the early 2000s, the writer used artistic techniques (metatext, Deus ex machina) that made it possible to “cancel” the physical death of the main characters (“I Plotted an Escape” (1999) and “The Mushroom King, or 36 Hours in the Life of an Almost Lonely Man” (2005)). This does not cancel the hero's severe moral crisis, but it preserves the possibility of positive changes. The novel the Plaster Trumpeter (2008-2022) is also a metatext. The writer dwells on such aspects as the attitude to death in society, the death of historical figures, death as an existential philosophical phenomenon, death and art. Death becomes almost the only irrevocable and authentic phenomenon in the life of a modern person surrounded by mirages. An important clarification of the author's position, in comparison with his previous work, can be considered the emphasis on the fact that art, regardless of whether it shows the physical death of a person or not, should help him to abandon mirages, see the truth and give hope to overcome at least moral death.
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Putri, Silvia Rizki Syah, and Widayati, Moneca Diah L. "Factors Associated with Early Detection Behavior on Breast Cancer among Women in Reproductive Age using SADANIS Method." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.02.01.

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Background: Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. In 2012, cancer was the cause of death for around 8.2 million people. Early detection of breast cancer with SADANIS method in Central Java is still low, namely 0.30% women in reproductive age. The SADANIS method is one of the government’s efforts to reduce the incidence of breast cancer. To determine the factors associated with the behavior of women on reproductive age in early detection of breast cancer using the SADANIS method in Jatirejo Village, Central Java. Subjects and Method: This was a cross sectional study conducted at Suruh Community Health Center, Jatirejo Village, Central Java. The population in this study were 604 women of reproductive age aged 20-45 years in Jatirejo Village. A total of 86 women were enrolled in this study. The dependent variable was SADANIS method. The independent variables were education, occupation, husband’s supports, and attitude. The data were collected and then analyzed using Chi-square test. Results: There was a relationship between husband’s support (OR= 4.58; p=0.015) and attitude (OR= 11.96; p&lt;0.001) with behavior in doing SADANIS among women in reproductive age and they were statistically significant. There was no relationship between education and occupation on the breast cancer early detection using SADANIS method. Conclusion: The better the attitude, the better the behavior of women in reproductive age in early detection of breast cancer with SADANIS method in Jatirejo Village, Semarang Regency. Keywords: women in reproductive age, SADANIS, early detection, breast cancer Correspondence: Silvia Rizki Syah Putri. ‘Aisyah University Yogyakarta. Jl. Siliwangi (West Ringroad) No.63 Nogotirto, Gamping, Sleman, Yogyakarta. Email: fikes@unisayogya.ac.id Mobile: (0274) 374427 DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.02.01
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Peshkopia, Ridvan. "Support for the Reinstatement of the Death Penalty as a Protest Attitude Against the Judiciary: The Role of Social Context." In University for Business and Technology International Conference. University for Business and Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.33107/ubt-ic.2017.325.

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Firdaus, Riza, Yulia Lanti Retno Dewi, and Bhisma Murti. "Multilevel Analysis on the Contextual Effect of the Integrated Health Post on the Use of Non-Communicable Disease Screening Service." In The 7th International Conference on Public Health 2020. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.38.

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ABSTRACT Background: Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) is the leading cause of death worldwide and a serious threat to health in low and middle income countries. This can be prevented by early detection and monitoring of NCDs risk factors. This study aimed to investigate the contextual effect of the integrated health post on the use of non- communicable disease screening service. Subjects and Method: A cross sectional study was carried out at 25 integrated health posts (posbindu) in Kapuas Hulu, West Kalimantan, Indonesia, from August to October 2019. A sample of 200 study subjects was selected by fixed disease sampling. The dependent variable was the use of NCD screening service. The independent variables were subjective norm, health information, family support, cadre support, health beha-vior, health status, attitude, and intention. The data were collected by questionnaire and analyzed by a multiple multilevel logistic regression run on Stata 13. Results: The use of NCD screening service increased with supportive subjective norm (b= o.88; 95% CI= 0.01 to 1.75; p= 0.045), high health information exposure (b= 1.10; 95% CI= 0.18 to 2.02; p= 0.019), strong family support (b= 0.94; 95% CI= 0.05 to 1.83; p= 0.037), strong cadre support (b= 0.87; 95% CI= 0.01 to 1.73; p= 0.047), health behavior (b= 1.39; 95% CI= 0.49 to 2.30; p= 0.002), had NCD (b= 1.30; 95% CI= 0.19 to 2.41; p= 0.021), positive attitude (b= 0.98; 95% CI= 0.12 to 1.84; p= 0.025), and strong intention (b= 1.14; 95% CI= 0.26 to 2.01; p= 0.010). Posbindu had negligible contextual effect on the use of NCD screening service with intra-class correlation (ICC)= 7.1%. Conclusion: The use of NCD screening service increases with supportive subjective norm, high health information exposure, strong family support, strong cadre support, health behavior, had NCD, positive attitude, and strong intention. Posbindu has negligible contextual effect on the use of NCD screening service. Keywords: non-communicable disease, screening service, integrated health post Correspondence: Riza Firdaus. Masters Program in Public Health, Universitas Sebelas Maret. Jl. Ir. Sutarmi 36A, Surakarta 57126, Central Java, Indonesia. Email: rizafirdaus88@yahoo.-co.id. Mobile: 08565056311. DOI: https://doi.org/10.26911/the7thicph.04.38
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Manea, Mirela, Adela Magdalena Ciobanu, and Mihnea Costin Manea. "ANXIETY - THERAPEUTIC OPTIONS FROM PAST TO PRESENT." In The European Conference of Psychiatry and Mental Health "Galatia". Archiv Euromedica, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.35630/2022/12/psy.ro.28.

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Anxiety is a diffuse fear of an object, rather potential than present, it is detached from concrete and projected in the future. It associates psychomotor restlessness and has neurovegetative response. Anxious symptoms create a discomfort that patients experience with great difficulty. Whether we are talking about generalized anxiety, or we are talking about anxious paroxysms, patients call for help, sometimes in Emergency Room (ER) because of irrational fear of death, or fear of madness. The anxiety disorder is common in all medical healthcare offices, but especially in psychiatry. The therapeutic attitude is based on the same principles everywhere, but there are situations in which the treatment differs and psychotic anxiety, the particular form requiring admission into specialized service, is under discussion here. If in the past, the first intention was benzodiazepine (BZD) anxiolytics at the moment, they are increasingly finding their place in the therapeutic scheme. The beneficial effect installs quickly, but when balancing the balance versus risk, balances often tend to overcome the anxiolytic classics. Nowadays, more frequently, protocols recommend administering SSRI antidepressants to treat anxiety. In the case of emergency in which anxiety occupies a main place, such as psychotic anxiety, it is necessary to prescribe antipsychotics, especially atypical antipsychotics. For these reasons, we aim to share our experience for patient benefit.
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Rustrian, Wilmer, and Praveen Shankar. "Modeling of a Small Remotely Operated Underwater Vehicle for Autonomous Navigation and Control." In ASME 2016 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2016-65520.

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Autonomous control of a remotely operated underwater vehicle requires a high fidelity simulation model to be developed. In this paper, we present a simulation model of a commercially available Mini Observant Class ROV that is developed based on first principles and validated by empirical data. Open-loop testing conducted on the underwater vehicle is utilized to validate the pitch attitude behavior and fine-tune the physical parameters in the simulation model. In addition, three autopilot systems is designed using classical control theory to enable autonomous control over the attitudes and depth of the underwater vehicle.
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Reports on the topic "Attitude to death"

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Gisi, Martha. Adrienne von Speyr on the Attitude of Prayer. In Commemoration of the Thirtieth Anniversary of Her Death. Saint John Publications, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.56154/s2.

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Stratton, Lon. Medical social workers' attitudes toward death and related matters. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2822.

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Lampkin, Cheryl. End of Life Survey: Thoughts and Attitudes on Death and Dying. AARP Research, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.26419/res.00308.001.

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Lampkin, Cheryl. End of Life Survey: Thoughts and Attitudes on Death and Dying: Annotated Questionnaire. AARP Research, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.26419/res.00308.002.

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Rheinberger, Christoph, and Nicolas Treich. Catastrophe aversion: social attitudes towards common fates. Fondation pour une culture de sécurité industrielle, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.57071/882rpq.

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In light of climate change and other existential threats, policy commentators sometimes suggest that society should be more concerned about catastrophes. This document reflects on what is, or should be, society’s attitude toward such low-probability, high-impact events. The question underlying this analysis is how society considers (1) a major accident that leads to a large number of deaths; (2) a large number of small accidents that each kill one person, where the two situations lead to the same total number of deaths. We first explain how catastrophic risk can be conceived of as a spread in the distribution of losses, or a “more risky” distribution of risks. We then review studies from decision sciences, psychology, and behavioral economics that elicit people’s attitudes toward various social risks. This literature review finds more evidence against than in favor of catastrophe aversion. We address a number of possible behavioral explanations for these observations, then turn to social choice theory to examine how various social welfare functions handle catastrophic risk. We explain why catastrophe aversion may be in conflict with equity concerns and other-regarding preferences. Finally, we discuss current approaches to evaluate and regulate catastrophic risk, with a discussion of how it could be integrated into a benefit-cost analysis framework.
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Perry, Shelley, and Jerry Lehnus. The Youth Attitude Tracking Study (YATS) In-Depth Interviews WITH YOUNG WOMEN: a Methodological Overview,. Defense Technical Information Center, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada362444.

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Allen, Alice. Use of the depth interview in examining attitudes of delinquent boys: an exploratory study. Portland State University Library, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.119.

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Cilliers, Jacobus, and Shardul Oza. The Motivations, Constraints, and Behaviour of Tanzania's Frontline Education Providers. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-ri_2020/023.

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In this note, we leverage data from a nationwide survey conducted in 2019 in Ethiopia to shed light on what Ward Education Officers do, their understanding of their own role, and the constraints they face in executing their responsibilities. We interviewed 397 WEOs responsible for primary schools across 23 districts and six regions of Tanzania as part of a baseline survey conducted between February and May 2019. This note contributes to a growing literature on the activities, self-perceptions, and motivation of public sector officials in charge of “last mile” service delivery. For example, Aiyar and Bhattacharya (2016) use time-use diaries, in-depth interviews, and quantitative data to understand the views, attitudes, and activities of sub-district education sector officials, called block education officers, in India.
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Zhou, Jiayi, Fei Su, and Jingdong Yuan. Treading Lightly: China’s Footprint in a Taliban-led Afghanistan. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.55163/ovbo3684.

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This SIPRI Insights Paper provides a preliminary assessment of China’s attitudes to and policies on Afghanistan since the August 2021 Taliban takeover. It examines the scope of China’s security, economic and humanitarian interests, and the depth of its engagement so far. It finds that China’s footprint has been minimal not only due to China’s non-interference policy but also to a range of broader challenges: the militant extremist groups that continue to operate on Afghan soil, the risks of investing in a country where the government remains unrecognized by any member of the international community and a fragile stability that is far from conducive to long-term planning. While there may be prospects and opportunities for China to contribute to Afghan stability and development, particularly from a broader regional perspective, current realities mean that China’s overall approach to Afghanistan will remain cautious, pragmatic and limited.
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ul Haque, Minhaj. Discrimination starts at home: A brief on parents' aspirations for adolescents and youth in Pakistan. Population Council, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy19.1009.

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Parents play a critical role in socializing their children and passing on essential information and life skills. The attitudes of parents help determine what young boys and girls do in life, and how they utilize opportunities and develop the skills necessary to make a comfortable transition into adulthood. This brief is based on interviews with Pakistani parents and describes their aspirations, which are likely to influence the lives of young people. More young people aged 15–24 live in Pakistan now than at any other time in its history—an estimated 36 million in 2004. Recognizing the dearth of information on the situation of this large group of young people, the Population Council undertook a nationally representative survey from October 2001 to March 2002. The analysis presented here comes from Adolescents and Youth in Pakistan 2001–02: A Nationally Representative Survey. The survey sought information from youth aged 15–24, responsible adults in the household, and other community members in 254 communities. A total of 6,585 households were visited and 8,074 young people were interviewed.
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