Parents’ religious/spiritual beliefs, practices, changes and needs after pregnancy or neonatal loss : a Danish cross-sectional study

Article

EKLUND, Mette Vingborg | PRINDS, Christina | MORK, Sofie | DAMM, Maiken | MOLLER, Sören | HVIDTJORN, Dorte

This study describes religious/spiritual beliefs, practices, changes, and needs among parents bereaved by pregnancy or neonatal loss, and assess gender differences in religiosity/spirituality, in this population. A cross-sectional study using data from the Danish cohort Life After the Loss was conducted. Data were gathered from a questionnaire survey collected between January 2016 and December 2019. Among 713 respondents, several answered in the affirmative to items related to religious/spiritual beliefs and practices. Some experienced changes in religious/spiritual beliefs and practices, and some wished to talk to someone about these questions. Women reported higher levels of religiosity/spirituality than men.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07481187.2020.1821260

Voir la revue «DEATH STUDIES, 46»

Autres numéros de la revue «DEATH STUDIES»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Parents’ religious/spiritual beliefs, p...

Article indépendant | EKLUND, Mette Vingborg | DEATH STUDIES | n°6 | vol.46

This study describes religious/spiritual beliefs, practices, changes, and needs among parents bereaved by pregnancy or neonatal loss, and assess gender differences in religiosity/spirituality, in this population. A cross-sectional...

Parents’ religious/spiritual beliefs, practic...

Article indépendant | EKLUND, Mette Vingborg | DEATH STUDIES | n°6 | vol.46

This study describes religious/spiritual beliefs, practices, changes, and needs among parents bereaved by pregnancy or neonatal loss, and assess gender differences in religiosity/spirituality, in this population. A cross-sectional...

Life after the loss : protocol for a Danish l...

Article indépendant | HVIDTJORN, Dorte | BMJ Open | n°12 | vol.8

INTRODUCTION: After the death of a child during pregnancy, birth or in the neonatal period, parents often experience feelings of guilt, disenfranchisement, feelings of betrayal by one's own body and envy of others. Such bereavemen...

De la même série

Newspaper coverage of advance care planning d...

Article | VAN DER SMISSEN, Doris | DEATH STUDIES | n°1 | vol.48

COVID-19 may cause sudden serious illness, and relatives having to act on patients’behalf,emphasizing the relevance of advance care planning (ACP). We explored how ACP was por-trayed in newspapers during year one of the pand...

End-of-life treatment preferences and advance...

Article | BARNETT, Michael D. | DEATH STUDIES | n°2 | vol.48

End-of-life treatment preferences (EOLTPs) refer to the amount of medical intervention an individual would wish to receive in a life-threatening scenario. This study aimed to investigate relationships between older adults’ E...

A systematic review of the relationship betwe...

Article | SIMS, Melissa A. | DEATH STUDIES | n°1 | vol.48

This systematic review aimed to examine the relationship between death anxiety and suicidality in adults, and the impact of death anxiety interventions on the capability for suicide and suicidality. MEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, and ...

Prolonged grief disorder : a bibliometric ana...

Article | KOUKOPOULOS, Anastasios | DEATH STUDIES | n°2 | vol.48

Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) has become a subject of increased interest among both researchers and practitioners, owing both to its recent inclusion in the DSM-5-TR and the growing evidence of widespread complications of bereave...

Factors associated with grief in informal car...

Article | TRUCCO, Ana Paula | DEATH STUDIES | n°2 | vol.48

The purpose of this mixed methods systematic review was to identify factors associated with anticipatory grief, post-death grief, and prolonged grief in informal carers of people living with Motor Neuron Disease (MND) to inform fu...

Chargement des enrichissements...