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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. Colin Murray Parkes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Murray_Parkes

    Parkes worked with Dora Black as a scientific editor of Bereavement Care, the international journal for bereavement counsellors.He also served as an advisory editor on several journals concerned with hospice, palliative care, and bereavement, and edited books on the nature of human attachments, The Place of Attachment in Human Behaviour [citation needed] and Attachment Across the Life Cycle.

  4. Margaret Torrie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Torrie

    While working for the Citizens Advice bureau she realised the effect that bereavement could make to widows. [2] Initially the priority was not psychological support but more practical problems like tax, pensions, training for a new job, insurance, diet and health. [3] She founded a charity in 1959, Cruse, to support bereaved people in the UK. [3]

  5. Healing environments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healing_environments

    Healing environment, for healthcare buildings describes a physical setting and organizational culture that supports patients and families through the stresses imposed by illness, hospitalization, medical visits, the process of healing, and sometimes, bereavement. The concept implies that the physical healthcare environment can make a difference ...

  6. Five stages of grief - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_stages_of_grief

    On the other hand, there are other theoretically based, scientific perspectives that better represent the course of grief and bereavement such as: trajectories approach, cognitive stress theory, meaning-making approach, psychosocial transition model, two-track model, dual process model, and the task model. [44]

  7. Jean Watson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Watson

    Jean Watson, PhD, RN, AHN-BC, FAAN, LL (AAN) is an American nurse theorist and nursing professor who is best known for her theory of human caring. She is the author of numerous texts, including Nursing: The Philosophy and Science of Caring. Watson's research on caring has been incorporated into education and patient care at hundreds of nursing ...

  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. Dual process model of coping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual_process_model_of_coping

    The dual process model of coping is a model for coping with grief developed by Margaret Stroebe and Henk Schut. This model seeks to address shortcomings of prior models of coping, and provide a framework that better represents the natural variation in coping experience on a day to day basis.