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  2. Cruse Bereavement Care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cruse_Bereavement_Care

    Cruse Bereavement Support is the UK's largest charity for bereaved people in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, with a sister organisation in Scotland. Cruse offers face-to-face, group, telephone, email and website support to people after someone close to them has died and works to enhance society's care of bereaved people.

  3. Margaret Torrie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Torrie

    Religious advice was not included however and in time Cruse became a secular charity. [3] In 1967 she took an interest in the trauma that follows a mastectomy. [4] By 1987 Torrie was noting that the support work supplied by Cruse was moving away from practical and spiritual support into a main influence on psychological support. [3]

  4. Colin Murray Parkes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Murray_Parkes

    Colin Murray Parkes was born in Highgate, London on 6 March 1928. [2] [3] From 1966, Parkes worked at St Christopher's Hospice in Sydenham, where he set up the first hospice-based bereavement service and carried out some of the earliest systematic evaluations of hospice care.

  5. Cruse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cruse

    Cruse may refer to: Cruse (surname), a list of people and a fictional character with this name; Cruse Bereavement Care, a UK charity; Cruse, Illinois, United States, an unincorporated community; Cruse Memorial Heliport, a private heliport in Douglas County, Oregon, United States

  6. Bereavement group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bereavement_group

    A systematic review of 74 studies noted that the lack of rigorous clinical trials of bereavement interventions precluded evidence-based recommendations for grief, citing incomplete reporting of interventions and methodological limitations of studies as factors contributing to a dearth of treatment recommendations. [14]

  7. Sue Ryder (charity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sue_Ryder_(charity)

    Sue Ryder is a British palliative and bereavement support charity based in the United Kingdom.Formed as The Sue Ryder Foundation in 1953 by World War II Special Operations Executive volunteer Sue Ryder, the organisation provides care and support for people living with terminal illnesses and neurological conditions, as well as individuals who are coping with a bereavement.

  8. Association for Death Education and Counseling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Association_for_Death...

    Founded in 1976, the organization's 1,500 members around the world: the majority live and practice in North America. With the death awareness movement in full swing across North American and Europe by the 1970s, the genesis for the organization that would become the Association for Death Education and Counseling was in a seminar on death education at University of Rhode Island in 1975 [2] led ...

  9. VSA (charity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VSA_(charity)

    The Aberdeen Association of Social Service, trading as VSA (abbreviation of Voluntary Service Aberdeen), is a charity based in Aberdeen. Since it was first established in 1870, it has helped thousands of the most vulnerable people and their families living in communities across the North East of Scotland. Its chief executive is Sue Freeth, who ...