Supporting parents and children prior to parental death in an NHS setting

Article

MACPHERSON, Catriona

The Children and Families Service in Fife Specialist Palliative Care adopts a psycho-educational model of support which offers advice and information to enable parents to prepare themselves and their children for parental dying, death and bereavement. The role of the Children and Families Practitioner is to support the family as early as possible, through each stage of their journey through bereavement, as far as possible. Working closely with school staff and other services ensures that everyone concerned has the information they need from us to support the children and young people concerned.

https://doi.org/10.1080/02682621.2018.1493639

Voir la revue «BEREAVEMENT CARE, 37»

Autres numéros de la revue «BEREAVEMENT CARE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Invitation to grief in the family context

Article indépendant | BREEN, Lauren J. | DEATH STUDIES | n°3 | vol.43

Grief is a family affair, yet it is commonly viewed as an individual phenomenon. As an international, interdisciplinary team, we explore grief within a family context across theoretical, research, practice, and educational domains...

Supporting parents and children prior to pare...

Article indépendant | MACPHERSON, Catriona | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°2 | vol.37

The Children and Families Service in Fife Specialist Palliative Care adopts a psycho-educational model of support which offers advice and information to enable parents to prepare themselves and their children for parental dying, d...

Supporting parents and children prior to pare...

Article indépendant | MACPHERSON, Catriona | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°2 | vol.37

The Children and Families Service in Fife Specialist Palliative Care adopts a psycho-educational model of support which offers advice and information to enable parents to prepare themselves and their children for parental dying, d...

De la même série

"Real experiences which increase empathy" : a...

Article | BECK, Emma | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°1 | vol.38

Perinatal death has an enduring effect on parents which is altered by their experience of care. However, professionals frequently report feeling underprepared to care for bereaved parents. This study evaluated parents’ and p...

Young people and their understanding of loss ...

Article | AUDSLEY, Annie | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°1 | vol.38

A significant proportion of secondary school pupils in the UK have experienced the death of someone close. Bereavement in childhood can have a significant and long lasting impact. The aim of this study was to explore how pupils ag...

Equal bereavement for same sex partners

Article | O'LEARY, Richard | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°2-3 | vol.38

Earlier this year many of us watched on our TV screens pictures from Northern Ireland of a funeral. The funeral of Lyra McKee. Lyra was a 29-year-old journalist at work in Derry when she was shot dead. Her funeral was a public eve...

The value of peer support groups following di...

Article | EYRE, Anne | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°2-3 | vol.38

This article reviews the nature of post-disaster peer support groups and highlights their role in addressing collective grief and trauma following mass fatality incidents. With reference to best practice guidelines for responding ...

Journals in the field of death studies and be...

Article | BRADY, Denise | BEREAVEMENT CARE | n°2-3 | vol.38

As this issue celebrates 60 years since the founding of Cruse, it is timely to review Bereavement Care, an important element in the development of the organisation, in the context of other journals with similar aims. The backgroun...

Chargement des enrichissements...