نتایج جستجو برای: dying

تعداد نتایج: 12724  

2016
Abdolghani Abdollahimohammad Mohammadreza Firouzkouhi Fatemeh Amrollahimishvan Nasrollah Alimohammadi

PURPOSE Nurses and physicians must be competent enough to provide care for the clients. As a lack of knowledge and a poor attitude result in a low performance of delivering care, this study aimed to explore the nurses versus physicians' knowledge, attitude, and performance on care for the family members of dying patients (FMDPs). METHODS This descriptive study was conducted at the educational...

Journal: :مجله علوم اعصاب شفای خاتم 0
mahboubeh dadfar department of clinical psychology, iran university of medical sciences, international campus, tehran, iran. david lester department of psychology, the richard stockton college of new jersey, new jersey, usa.

death fear is defined as a morbid, abnormal or persistent anxiety of one's own death or the process of his/her dying. fear of death is a feeling of dread, apprehension or solicitude (anxiety) when one thinks of the process of dying, or ceasing to ‘be’. nurses, as healthcare professionals, are exposed to dying patients and their beliefs about death phenomenon can impact on their general hea...

Journal: :Academic Medicine 2003

Journal: :Journal of social work in end-of-life & palliative care 2015
Kathy Black Ellen L Csikai

Due to the unprecedented increase in the United States aging demographics, many more people are living longer and reaching older ages than ever before. However, a longer life is not necessarily a better life, as the vast majority will face a period of prolonged deteriorating health prior to death. Although notable efforts have been underway that are designed to improve the end-of-life experienc...

Journal: :British medical journal 1976
G Dunea

In recent years a succession of writers has lamented that a society which has the highest standard of living should also have the lowest standard of dying. Death, they maintain, has replaced sex as the most unmentionable taboo, and the act of dying has become lonely, mechanical, dehumanised, and at times gruesome.' Some have referred to the "obscenity of modern dying," exemplified by an imperso...

Journal: :Journal of homosexuality 2012
Alison Keleher Eric R A N Smith

Since 1991, public acceptance of gays and lesbians has grown dramatically. We use two approaches to examine changing attitudes in U.S. survey data. First, we conduct cohort analyses showing that both generational replacement and period effects are having impacts. Since 1991, older, less accepting generations of Americans have been dying and being replaced by younger, more tolerant Americans, an...

1967
H. Merskey

Professor Hinton is a psychiatrist who has made careful studies of the reactions of dying people, the awareness they have that they are dying, and the ways in which their doctors and nurses may help to bring them solace. His original work is deservedly much esteemed. It has lost nothing by presentation in this volume together with additional information on the circumstances, customs and attitud...

2016
Kerstin Nilsson

OBJECTIVES Children and young people growing up in a farm environment run a greater risk of being injured or dying in an accident than their non-farming counterparts. This study examines farming parents' attitudes and experiences of having their children grow up on farms, one of the most dangerous work environments as their home, everyday environment and playground. METHOD Data were collected...

آزادارمکی, تقی, انوشه, منیره, حیدری, محمدرضا, محمدی, عیسی ,

Caring for dying patient is one of the painful events and a tough experience for nurses. Care of dying patient according to his/her cultural norms is one of the principles of nurse's professionalism. Therefore identifying and explaining the daily experiences of nurses in cultural care of dying patients would help in determining caring standards. Due to the lack of such studies, the aim of this ...

Journal: :The Lancet 1885

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