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Journal articles on the topic 'Personal Grief'

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1

GRASSMAN, DEBORAH. "Turning PERSONAL GRIEF Into PERSONAL GROWTH." Nursing 22, no. 4 (1992): 43–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00152193-199204000-00017.

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Matsumoto, Ikuko Takagi. "Healing the Collective Grief: A Story of a Marshallese Pastor from Okinawa." Religions 13, no. 2 (2022): 90. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel13020090.

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World War II and the Cold War never ended in the Marshall Islands. A seamless continuum of colonialism, wars and nuclear testing destroyed their ancestral islands, traditions, as well as the physical and spiritual wellbeing of the people; it caused them profound personal and collective grief. This article considers the grieving of the Marshallese people, through the lens of a life story of a migrant to the Marshall Islands from Okinawa, Chutaro Gushi (1911–1977). The examination uses the concepts provided by grief studies, such as personal grief and collective grief, and applies the theoretica
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3

Rynearson, Edward K. "Personal Reflections: Is Grief Pathologic?" Psychiatric Annals 20, no. 6 (1990): 294. http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/0048-5713-19900601-04.

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Pathy, Mary Ann. "A Personal Journey through Grief." Illness, Crisis & Loss 9, no. 4 (2001): 381–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/105413730100900405.

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Anderson, Keith A., and Joseph E. Gaugler. "The Grief Experiences of Certified Nursing Assistants: Personal Growth and Complicated Grief." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 54, no. 4 (2007): 301–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/t14n-w223-7612-0224.

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The grief that certified nursing assistants (CNAs) experience following the deaths of nursing home residents has received scant attention in past research, particularly from an empirical standpoint. The purpose of this quantitative study was to investigate the grief experiences of CNAs in the nursing home setting and to identify and evaluate factors that may mediate or exacerbate grief. Participants ( N = 136) from 12 nursing homes completed self-administered surveys. Regression analyses revealed that CNAs with lower levels of perceived disenfranchised grief reported higher levels of personal
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Hogan, Laura A. "Personal Grief in the Professional World." Journal of Palliative Medicine 20, no. 3 (2017): 303–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2016.0426.

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7

Fahey-McCarthy, Elizabeth. "Exploring theories of grief: personal reflection." British Journal of Midwifery 11, no. 10 (2003): 595–603. http://dx.doi.org/10.12968/bjom.2003.11.10.11743.

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8

Fulton, Amy Elizabeth. "Personal Grief: On Losing My Grandfather." Journal of Social Work in End-Of-Life & Palliative Care 10, no. 1 (2014): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15524256.2013.877862.

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9

Beran, Ondřej. "Ecological Grief Observed from a Distance." Philosophies 9, no. 2 (2024): 37. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9020037.

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The paper discusses ecological grief as a particular affective phenomenon. First, it offers an overview of several philosophical accounts of grief, acknowledging the heterogeneity and complexity of the experience that responds to particular personal points of importance, concern and one’s identity; the loss triggering grief represents a blow to these. I then argue that ecological grief is equally varied and personal: responding to what the grieving person understands as a loss severe enough to present intelligibly a degradation of her life and the world, to their meaningfulness or even sustain
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Funk, Laura M., Sheryl Peters, and Kerstin Stieber Roger. "The Emotional Labor of Personal Grief in Palliative Care: Balancing Caring and Professional Identities." Qualitative Health Research 27, no. 14 (2017): 2211–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1049732317729139.

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The paid provision of care for dying persons and their families blends commodified emotion work and attachments to two often-conflicting role identities: the caring person and the professional. We explore how health care employees interpret personal grief related to patient death, drawing on interviews with 12 health care aides and 13 nurses. Data were analyzed collaboratively using an interpretively embedded thematic coding approach and constant comparison. Participant accounts of preventing, postponing, suppressing, and coping with grief revealed implicit meanings about the nature of grief a
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Brooks, Maegan Parker. "Listening to Layers of Loss." Journal of Autoethnography 4, no. 2 (2023): 174–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/joae.2023.4.2.174.

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Reflecting on the recent losses of her sister, father, and mother in the midst of the global pandemic, the author moves from acquaintance-level grief communication encounters through grief communication with friends, family, and, ultimately, the self-communication that has sustained her during this intense period of bereavement. Building upon scholarship in autoethnography, family communication, grief, and trauma studies, moreover, the author shares bereavement practices that have helped her process loss. Following her personal narrative, she provides seven offerings to encourage the bereaved
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VanKatwyk, Peter L. "A Family Observed: Theological and Family Systems Perspectives on the Grief Experience." Journal of Pastoral Care 47, no. 2 (1993): 141–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002234099304700206.

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Explores the grief experience in a family case study and proposes an integrative model of pastoral grief ministry in which personal grief reactions are attended to within the family context. Utilizes developmental/systemic perspectives to correlate the family grief experience with the process of family grief ministry, focusing especially on the pastoral task of facilitating the family in constructing a healing theory.
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13

BERZOFF, JOAN. "Narratives of grief and their potential for transformation." Palliative and Supportive Care 4, no. 2 (2006): 121–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1478951506060172.

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This article examines narratives of grief and loss and how, under the best of circumstances, they may lead to transformation and growth, even contributing to the greater social good. Using psychodynamic and narrative theories, and examples drawn from mourners who have used their grief in powerful and political ways, I make the case that even grief that has been highly appropriated and contested, as in the case of Terri Schiavo, may ultimately serve important functions. Grief may mobilize mourners by helping them to turn passivity into activity. Grief may mobilize higher-level defenses such as
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14

Walter, Tony, and Tara Bailey. "How Funerals accomplish Family: Findings from a Mass-Observation Study. Transl. from Eng. by A.A. Zaitseva, Yu.A. Ivanova." Sociological Journal 29, no. 1 (2023): 141–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.19181/socjour.2023.29.1.8.

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This article analyzes how potentially conflicting frames of grief and family operate in a number of English funerals. The data come from the 2010 Mass-Observation directive “Going to Funerals” which asked its panel of correspondents to write about the most recent funeral they attended. In their writings, grief is displayed through conventional conceptions of family. Drawing on Randall Collins, we show how the funeral divides mourners into family or nonfamily, with such differentiation occurring through outward display and internal feelings. The funerals described were more about a very traditi
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15

Hawes, Frances, and Shuangshuang Wang. "A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF GRIEF SUPPORT AND BURNOUT AMONG NURSING HOME STAFF." Innovation in Aging 7, Supplement_1 (2023): 323. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igad104.1076.

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Abstract A half-million older adults die in U.S. nursing homes (NHs) each year. However, only a few studies have been conducted on the experiences of the nursing home (NH) staff who provide this care. This study collected data from 555 NH workers in Fall 2022 and examined how their experiences with grief support affected burnout. Grief support was measured by the Grief Support Health Care Scale. Burnout was measured by the Maslach Burnout Inventory, which includes 3 subscales: exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal achievement. Findings indicate that 95% of sampled workers were exposed to
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16

Duncan, Sallyanne. "Sadly missed: The death knock news story as a personal narrative of grief." Journalism 13, no. 5 (2012): 589–603. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1464884911431542.

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This article examines the manner in which journalists write news stories based on the ‘death knock’ interview where they gather reaction from the recently bereaved about their loss. The death knock news story with its emphasis on the first-hand testimony of the bereaved in certain respects can be perceived as a personal narrative of grief. This research studies the types of narratives used to tell these personal stories and applies Labov and Waletzky’s personal narrative model in order to determine what the bereaved tell us about grief and how the journalist interprets it. Statements from the
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17

Polli, Gail E. "Enduring grief: True stories of personal loss." Journal of Emergency Nursing 24, no. 4 (1998): 355. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0099-1767(98)90128-3.

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18

Boelen, Paul A. "Personal goals and prolonged grief disorder symptoms." Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy 18, no. 6 (2010): 439–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpp.731.

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19

Walter, Tony, and Tara Bailey. "How Funerals Accomplish Family: Findings From a Mass-Observation Study." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 82, no. 2 (2018): 175–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0030222818804646.

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The article analyses how potentially conflicting frames of grief and family operate in a number of English funerals. The data come from the 2010 Mass-Observation directive “Going to Funerals” which asked its panel of correspondents to write about the most recent funeral they had attended. In their writings, grief is displayed through conventional understandings of family. Drawing on Randall Collins, we show how the funeral stratifies mourners into family or nonfamily, a stratification accomplished—by family and nonfamily—through both outward display and inner feeling. The funerals described we
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20

Попкова, Татьяна Алексеевна, Светлана Анатольевна Травина, and Сергей Николаевич Махновец. "STUDY OF PERSONAL FEATURES OF WOMEN IN SITUATION EXPERIENCES OF GRIEF." Вестник Тверского государственного университета. Серия: Педагогика и психология, no. 4(57) (December 24, 2021): 49–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.26456/vtpsyped/2021.4.049.

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Рассматриваются особенности психоэмоциональных состояний женщин, переживающих ситуации горя. Обосновывается значимость психологической поддержки в ходе переживания горя как условие профилактики депрессивных состояний. Выявлены эмпирически значимые гендерные и возрастные закономерности, способствующие повышению адаптивных возможностей женщин, находящихся в ситуации переживания горя. Обозначены ресурсы преодоления негативных, разрушительных эффектов горевания. The features of psychoemotional states of women experiencing situations of grief are considered. The importance of psychological support
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Vickers, Margaret H. "Bounded Grief at Work: Working and Caring for Children with Chronic Illness." Illness, Crisis & Loss 13, no. 3 (2005): 201–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/105413730501300302.

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This article highlights the problem of bounded grief in our workplaces. The article commences by making the case that grief does exist at work—both grief from our personal lives brought to work, and grief emanating from workplace experiences. Then, I present a qualitative analysis that demonstrates grief that can exist in and around our workplaces; the grief of women who are in paid full time work while caring for a child with chronic illness. The findings reinforce that “there's always grief in the room.” For these women, their grief is ongoing, recurring and multiple-sourced. Often we don't
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22

Das, Enny, and Judith Peters. "“They Never Really Leave Us”: Transcendent Narratives About Loss Resonate With the Experience of Severe Grief." Human Communication Research 48, no. 2 (2022): 320–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hcr/hqac001.

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Abstract Self-transcendent media experiences can instill a sense of connectedness, the sense of being part of a bigger whole. Proposing that this experience is relevant for people who have lost a loved one, the present research examined processing and effects of transcendent narratives of loss among the bereaved. Study 1 (N = 1,012) examined if personal experience with loss (grief severity, loss acceptance) increased mixed affect, transportation, identification, and appreciation of narratives of loss with, and without a reference to transcendence; Study 2 (N = 240) examined effects on elevatio
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23

Kobiske, Karie Ruekert, Abir K. Bekhet, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, and Marilyn Frenn. "Predeath Grief, Resourcefulness, and Perceived Stress Among Caregivers of Partners With Young-Onset Dementia." Western Journal of Nursing Research 41, no. 7 (2018): 973–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0193945918806689.

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More than 200,000 Americans are currently diagnosed with young-onset dementia (YOD). YOD is dementia diagnosed prior to the age of 65. Most persons of YOD are cared for by their partners. Using the theoretical framework of Resilience Theory, this cross-sectional, correlational study examined the moderating effects of personal and social resourcefulness on the relationship between predeath grief and perceived stress among 104 YOD caregiving partners (life partners/spouses) using an online survey platform. Results indicated a large positive correlation between predeath grief and caregiver percei
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Betriana, Feni, Tetsuya Tanioka, Tomoya Yokotani, et al. "Factors Influencing the Levels of Grief Among Indonesian Nurses." International Journal for Human Caring 25, no. 2 (2021): 110–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.20467/humancaring-d-20-00017.

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This study aimed to develop the Grief State Scale for Nurses to measure the level of nurses' grief and to identify items influencing grief levels among Indonesian nurses. A total of 267 questionnaires were analyzed and interpreted. Statistical analyses were performed using descriptive statistics and exploratory factor analysis. Items influential in increasing nurses' grief were relating death with personal loss; patient's age/illness similar to nurse's family members; and having rapport with patients. Time and place to express grief, allocation of grieving time, and sharing collegial emotional
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Cariaga, Stephanie. "Grief Work." In Dialogue/En Diálogo 1, no. 1 (2023): 15–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.46787/dialogue.v1i1.3343.

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The ongoing pandemic and an outpouring call for racial, economic, gender, disability and climate justice have incited a rupture in our “normal” ways of being, knowing, and relating. As teacher educators, we have yet to fully “acknowledge the rupture” (Roy, 2020), grieve what we may have lost, and reckon with our underlying responsibilities to ourselves, our students, and to each other. Integrating personal narrative and pedagogical reflections, in addition to building upon apocalyptic, abolitionist, and embodied frameworks, I explore our collective and complicit hesitance to change in teacher
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Wolf, Tabea, Veronika Strack, and Susan Bluck. "Maladaptive Use of Autobiographical Memory by Bereaved Individuals Across Adulthood." Innovation in Aging 4, Supplement_1 (2020): 606. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.2047.

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Abstract Remembering one’s personal past can serve adaptive psychosocial functions (Bluck, Alea, & Demiray, 2010). Autobiographical remembering has been related to well-being in older age but little research has focused on grief. We address this issue in two studies grounded in the model of reminiscence and health in older adulthood (Cappeliez & O’Rourke, 2006). Participants (aged 18 - 91) completed the Reminiscence Functions Scale and the Inventory of Complicated Grief. Regression analyses show that negative self-related use of memories, but not positive use, is associated with experi
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Rosell, Tarris D. "Grieving the Loss of a Companion Animal: Pastoral Perspective and Personal Narrative regarding One Sort of Disenfranchised Grief." Review & Expositor 102, no. 1 (2005): 47–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003463730510200106.

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People grieve because of the death of their companion animals; however, this grief is often overlooked or trivialized as an insignificant form of mourning. In this essay Tarris Rosell helps define disenfranchised grief and brings it into a practical pastoral perspective. He provides readers with sensitive ways to consider the impact that the loss of a companion animal can have on a grieving individual. Beside the pastoral definition of disenfranchised grief, the author also provides a thoughtful and touching personal narrative of his family's grief, rituals and healing regarding the loss of th
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Oexle, Nathalie, and Lindsay Sheehan. "Perceived Social Support and Mental Health After Suicide Loss." Crisis 41, no. 1 (2020): 65–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910/a000594.

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Abstract. Background: Despite great need, social support is limited after suicide loss, which could contribute to worse mental health outcomes including increased suicidality among suicide loss survivors. Aims: To examine the associations between perceived social support, grief difficulties, depressive symptoms, suicidality, and personal growth among 195 suicide loss survivors. Method: The associations between perceived social support, grief difficulties, depressive symptoms, suicidality, and personal growth were tested using linear regression modeling. Results: In controlled models, more perc
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Whiston, Amna. "Love and Grief (Loving better through Grief)." Think 22, no. 65 (2023): 53–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1477175623000234.

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AbstractWhen, in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York more than two decades ago, the late Queen Elizabeth II expressed her sentiments with the words: ‘Grief is the price we pay for love’, she was making a reference to British psychiatrist Dr Colin Murray Parkes's book Bereavement: Studies of Grief in Adult Life. In the book, Dr Parkes states an obvious, albeit often ignored, fact that the pain of grief is just as much part of life as the joy of love. Following the death of the Queen in September 2022, Joe Biden, the current president of the US, u
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Weiss, Charlotte R., Melissa Florell, Kathleen Oman, and Karen Sousa. "Concept Analysis of Disenfranchised Grief Within a Nursing Paradigm: To Awaken Our Caring Humanity." International Journal for Human Caring 27, no. 2 (2023): 92–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.20467/ijhc.2021-0021.

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Disenfranchised grief is experienced during bereavement loss and after the loss of something personal, physical, or psychological in which a person lacks societal witnessing, empathy, or validation of their loss. A concept analysis was performed to identify the antecedents, attributes, and consequences of disenfranchised grief. A model case was developed to assist nurses in identifying patterns of disenfranchised grief. Grounded within the Unitary Caring Science paradigm, a new definition of disenfranchised grief was developed. Recommendations framed through the lens of Unitary Caring Science
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Rowling, Louise. "The Disenfranchised Grief of Teachers." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 31, no. 4 (1995): 317–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/3em7-71u5-me8v-54mp.

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Much attention has been paid to the need for support for grieving young people. Teachers have often been identified as supportive, emotionally detached adults who can perform this role. This expectation of them, in their professional role, creates tension with their beliefs, expectations and experiences in that role and their personal lives. The tension is often centered around the issue of control, control of personal grief reactions and orderliness and predictability in the school environment. Teachers' grief can be hidden—disenfranchised because their relationship with a student is not reco
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Zsák, Éva, Teodóra Dömötör, and Katalin Hegedűs. "Personal Loss and Grief Experiences of Healthcare Personnel in Pre- and Perinatal Care: A Review of Literature." Cancer and Clinical Oncology 8, no. 1 (2019): 23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/cco.v8n1p23.

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Pre- and perinatal loss and grief tend to be referred to as complicated grief denoting the experience of ongoing trauma. It is considered a burden for the affected parents, their families and the helping professionals alike. Yet this phenomenon remains an underrepresented field in analytical studies. Our aim is to systematically review the literature that deals with personal grief caused by pre- and perinatal loss - as experienced by healthcare staff. We shall present a comprehensive view of relevant international and national attitudes including existing grief management options. The above-me
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Uzunova, Denitsa. "Existential Foundations of Grief." Diogenes 32, no. 2 (2024): 87–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.54664/kcuo2921.

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The article presents some basic characteristics of grief and its role in experiencing the loss of loved ones. In philosophical texts, the focus is on personal death. The subject of the experience of another’s death is considerably less researched. In the article, grief is presented as a necessary transition from the suffering of loss to new life
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Rossy, Sharon. "Lessons Learned from a Personal Journey of Grief." Illness, Crisis & Loss 20, no. 1 (2012): 79–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/il.20.1.i.

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Chatterjee, Suhita Chopra. "Spiritual Interventions in Grief Resolution: A Personal Narrative." Illness, Crisis & Loss 15, no. 2 (2007): 113–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/105413730701500204.

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Flory, Curtis B. "Personal Accounts: A Son's Suicide, a Father's Grief." Psychiatric Services 51, no. 2 (2000): 183–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.51.2.183.

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Feigelman, William, John R. Jordan, and Bernard S. Gorman. "Personal Growth after a Suicide Loss: Cross-Sectional Findings Suggest Growth after Loss May Be Associated with Better Mental Health among Survivors." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 59, no. 3 (2009): 181–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/om.59.3.a.

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With a diverse sample of 462 parent survivors of their child's suicide we explored the association of the personal growth subscale of the Hogan Grief Reaction Checklist (HGRC) with mental health problems among longer-term survivors. In this article we offer additional validation for this scale's association with longer-term survivorship and reduced grief difficulties. We also demonstrate its negative relationship with mental health problems. In addition, we explore the demographic correlates of personal growth, which are likely to enable some survivors to experience personal growth sooner than
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Nguyen, Marlene, Donna M. Breese, and Kristin Kellett. "Leading Pharmacists Who Experience Patient Loss." Senior Care Pharmacist 39, no. 12 (2024): 445–48. https://doi.org/10.4140/tcp.n.2024.445.

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Health care providers, at some point in their careers, will experience grief and loss of a patient. Grief is a natural response that many people experience, especially working in those fields such as community pharmacy, hospitals, hospice, and others. Pharmacists serve as community leaders and need to be properly trained early on how to deal with grief and loss both personally and within their teams. Pharmacist leaders can lead their team through hard times by developing a toolbox of skills. These skills include emotional intelligence, communication, and leadership skills to work through perso
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Çakar, Firdevs Savi. "The Role of Social Support in the Relationship Between Adolescents’ Level of Loss and Grief and Well-Being." International Education Studies 13, no. 12 (2020): 27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ies.v13n12p27.

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In this study, the model, developed to examine the role of social support in the relationship between adolescents’ level of loss and grief and well-being, was tested. In this study, the descriptive research method was used, and its participants consisted of 216 adolescents who were high school students, in Turkey. Scales used in this study include Personal Information Form; Grief Scale; Five-Dimensional Well-Being Scale for Adolescents (EPOCH); Social Support Assessment Scale for Children and Adolescents (CASSS and Personal Information Form). The structural equation model was used to
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Ratcliffe, Matthew, and Louise Richardson. "Grief over Non-Death Losses." Passion: Journal of the European Philosophical Society for the Study of Emotions 1, no. 1 (2023): 50–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.59123/passion.v1i1.12287.

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Grief is often thought of as an emotional response to the death of someone we love. However, the term “grief” is also used when referring to losses of various other kinds, as with grief over illness, injury, unemployment, diminished abilities, relationship breakups, or loss of significant personal possessions. Complementing such uses, we propose that grief over a bereavement and other experiences of loss share a common phenomenological structure: one experiences the loss of certain possibilities that were integral to—and perhaps central to—the unfolding structure of one’s life. Grief can thus
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Jiménez-Alonso, Belén, and Ignacio Brescó De Luna. "Narratives of Loss: Exploring Grief through Photography." Qualitative Studies 6, no. 1 (2021): 91–115. http://dx.doi.org/10.7146/qs.v6i1.124433.

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 Grief is not an exclusively private and intrapsychic phenomenon but a dynamic process whereby the bereaved negotiates the meaning of the loss in a way that may challenge his/her personal self-narrative. Drawing on a social constructionist model of grief, this paper features a case study where we analyse narratives of mourning elicited through a personal photographic project. The visual-based narrative methodology used in our study (photo-production) not only allows for multi-modal forms of expression and communication in the study of grief, but it also serves as an aid for
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Moseley, Dan. "When Congregations Grieve." Review & Expositor 100, no. 2 (2003): 219–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/003463730310000205.

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All life is interim. Moseley speaks from his personal experience of grief when he lost his wife of 31 years. Using his own grief and recovery as his model, he draws parallels for churches and interim pastors to use in dealing with the church's grief over losing a pastor. Whether the former pastor was deeply loved or left under engative circumstances, there is still a sense of loss and grief. Congregations may experience anger or fear of building a relationship with a new pastor. One key to working through grief is remembering the past and looking to the future based on the realization of God's
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Matthews, Angela. "Writing through grief: Using autoethnography to help process grief after the death of a loved one." Methodological Innovations 12, no. 3 (2019): 205979911988956. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2059799119889569.

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While reliving traumatic events may initially feel agonizing, writing down our worst experiences can also offer a way to cope with some of life’s horrors. The following narrative presents and describes how one grieving mother harnessed autoethnography to process her profound grief. The researcher draws on personal experience losing her son, chronicling her thoughts and feelings in grief journals, and eventually compiling autoethnographic field notes and reflections. This article helps support the argument that weaving personal experiences with academic research can reveal an understanding of c
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Esplen, Mary Jane, Jiahui Wong, Mary L. S. Vachon, and Yvonne Leung. "A Continuing Educational Program Supporting Health Professionals to Manage Grief and Loss." Current Oncology 29, no. 3 (2022): 1461–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29030123.

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Health professionals working in oncology face the challenge of a stressful work environment along with impacts of providing care to those suffering from a life-threatening illness and encountering high levels of patient loss. Longitudinal exposure to loss and suffering can lead to grief, which over time can lead to the development of compassion fatigue (CF). Prevalence rates of CF are significant, yet health professionals have little knowledge on the topic. A six-week continuing education program aimed to provide information on CF and support in managing grief and loss and consisted of virtual
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45

Pahl, Nelson. "Personal Pilgrimage Aids in Processing of Traumatic Grief in Survivors of Parent Suicide." Grief 1, no. 2 (2024): 8–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.70089/qfw5ns32.

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A twenty-six-year-old female suffers traumatic loss after her father’s suicide. Client has endured approximately four months of complicated grief to date. She experiences, among other things, preoccupation with the end story, intense sorrow, sleeplessness, and appetite issues. Embarking on a series of 45-minute weekly sessions just two weeks prior, Client and I have thus far addressed her grief through re-membering exercises and an experiential therapy tactic called the Personal Pilgrimage.
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Barr, Peter, and Joanne Cacciatore. "Problematic Emotions and Maternal Grief." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 56, no. 4 (2008): 331–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/om.56.4.b.

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The study was an empirical examination of the relation of personality proneness to “problematic social emotions”—envy (Dispositional Envy Scale), jealousy (Interpersonal Jealousy Scale), and shame and guilt (Personal Feelings Questionnaire-2)—to maternal grief (Perinatal Grief Scale-33) following miscarriage, stillbirth, neonatal death, or infant/child death. The 441 women who participated in the study were enrolled from the Website, e-mail contact lists, and parent support groups of an organization that offers information and support to bereaved parents. All four problematic emotions were pos
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Robinson, Evelyn. "Post-Adoption Grief Counselling." Adoption & Fostering 26, no. 2 (2002): 57–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030857590202600208.

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Evelyn Robinson addresses the grief experienced by mothers who have lost children through adoption and suggests that their grief is disenfranchised. She explores the reasons for this and outlines methods for assisting mothers to integrate their experience of adoption loss into their lives, as practised in a self-help group, supported by government funding, which currently operates in South Australia. The article is based on the author's personal experience, both as a mother who lost a child through adoption and as a counsellor/co-ordinator with the group under discussion.
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48

Barney, Kendyl A., and Stephen M. Yoshimura. "Death-Related Grief and Disenfranchised Identity: A Communication Approach." Review of Communication Research 8 (2020): 78–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.12840/issn.2255-4165.024.

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The death of a significant person in one’s life forces individuals to engage in a number of grief-related tasks, including reconstructing a narrative about the relationship, resituating their relationship with the deceased individual, and developing a new sense of self post-loss. The dominant narrative of grief, however, generally assumes that the experience is a finite, linear process of detachment. Given past research challenging the reality of that experience, we draw upon Doka’s (2002) theory of disenfranchised grief to propose that grief is not only a possible temporary state of disenfran
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Parker, Julie S. "Extraordinary Experiences of the Bereaved and Adaptive Outcomes of Grief." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 51, no. 4 (2005): 257–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/fm7m-314b-u3rt-e2cb.

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A multiple case questionnaire/interview study was used to investigate Extraordinary Experiences (EEs) reported by bereaved individuals. Its purpose was to describe the grief processes of 12 bereaved individuals who had reported EEs. Content analysis consisted of a series of individual case data displays and causal networks from which an overall causal network that described participants' grief processes was derived. Despite some ongoing grief work and complicated grief patterns, 11 participants had reached an adaptive grief outcome. For these individuals, EEs played specific roles and fulfille
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50

Fu, Fang, Lin Chen, Wei Sha, Cecilia L. W. Chan, Amy Y. M. Chow, and Vivian W. Q. Lou. "Mothers’ Grief Experiences of Losing Their Only Child in the 2008 Sichuan Earthquake: A Qualitative Longitudinal Study." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 81, no. 1 (2018): 3–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0030222818755287.

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The purpose of this study is to explore bereaved mothers’ 2-year experiences of losing their only child in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. Taking an interpretative phenomenological approach, this study interviewed six bereaved mothers four times (6 months, 12 months, 18 months, and 24 months) in Dujiangyan area in Sichuan Province. The findings suggest that these mothers’ personal grief experiences evolved: initially, anger toward the cause of their children’s deaths, following despair of meaningless life, guilt and regret, and finally yearning. Although their yearning and missing ebbed after 2 y
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