Bereavement Care for Families 1st Edition by David W Kissane, Francine Parnes – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0415637384, 9780415637381
Full download Bereavement Care for Families 1st Edition after payment

Product details:
ISBN 10: 0415637384
ISBN 13: 9780415637381
Author: David W Kissane, Francine Parnes
Bereavement Care for Families 1st Table of contents:
Part I Overview of the Clinical Development of Bereavement Care for Families
1 Family Grief
Grief in the Family of Edvard Munch
The Theory of Family Grief
Range of Family Responses
Recognition of Families “at Risk” of Complicated Grief
Family Life Cycle
Family Rituals
The Contribution of Culture
Roles within the Family
Functionality
Mourning, Resolution, and Creativity
Attachment Theory
Psychosocial Transition—The Assumptive World
The Dual-Process Model of Coping with Bereavement
Resolution of Mourning and New Creativity
Grief as a Family Affair
Conclusion
References
2 Conceptual Framework for Family Bereavement Care Strengthening Resilience
From an Individual Focus to a Systemic Lens
A Developmental Systemic Framework
Family Bereavement in Its Socio-Cultural Context
Nature of the Death
A Family Life Cycle Perspective
Timing of Loss in the Family Life Cycle
The New Normal Family: Many Varied Pathways through Life
From Family Dysfunction to Family Resilience Orientation
Family Adaptation to Loss
Facilitating Family Adaptational Tasks
Family Assessment and Intervention
Conclusion
References
3 The Family with Chronic Physical Disorders An Integrative Model
Overview of Family Systems Illness Model
Psychosocial Types of Illness
Time Phases of Illness
The New Genetics and an Extended Illness Timeline
Clinical Applications of Family Therapy with Physical Illness
Family Assessment in the Setting of Physical Illness
Multigenerational Legacies of Illness, Loss, and Crisis
Interweaving of Individual, Family, and Illness Development
Conclusion
References
4 The Family with Mental Illness
A Brief History of Evolving Ideas about Families and Mental Illness
The Deficit Approach
The Family as Resource Approach
The Clinical Course Approach
The Family Impact Approach
Family Therapy Approaches for Treatment of Severe Mental Illness
Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorders
Substance Abuse
Future Directions for Family Care during Mental Illness
Conclusion
References
5 Ethical Dimensions of Family Bereavement Care
Guiding Ethical Frameworks for Family Therapy
Principlism
Utilitarianism (Consequentialism)
Deontology
Virtue Theory
Ethics of Care
Integrative Clinically Based Frameworks
Case-Centered Ethics
The Situational Diagnosis
Codes of Ethics
Specific Ethical Challenges in Family Grief Therapy
Role of the Therapist
Screening and Measuring Outcomes versus Labeling
Informed Consent
Competing Needs
Boundaries of Therapy
Maintaining Confidences and Truth Telling
Duration of Grief Therapy
Competency
Technology Challenges
Countertransference
Conclusion
References
Part II Grief Therapy with Families—A Practical Approach to Care Delivery
6 Assessing Bereaved Families
The Narrative of the Loss
The Person
The Death
The Funeral
Impact at a Family Level—Coping
Historical Responses to Loss across Generations
Facilitating an Agenda of Mutual Support: Shared Goals of Therapy
Conclusion
References
7 Therapist Techniques in Family Work
Before the Therapist Begins: Setting Up a Family Meeting
Joining with the Family
Establishing Shared Agendas for the Family Meeting
Some Theoretical Principles Guiding the Therapist’s Further Work
Questioning Techniques
Development of Styles of Questions as the Therapy Unfolds
The Role of Summaries as Therapy Unfolds
Sustaining Safety for the Family
Highlighting Family Strengths as a Resource
Illustrative Case Example of Therapist Techniques
Early Phase of Therapy: Orienting Questions
Later Phases of Therapy: Influencing Questions
Conclusion
References
8 Culture and Grief in Families
Latino Cultural Values
Familismo
Gender Roles
Tradition—What Families Do Together
Religion
Asian Cultural Values
Power Hierarchy
Cultural Beliefs
Shame and Inhibited Emotional Expression
African American Families
Cultural Variations in Islam
Haitian Families
Hinduism and India
The Judaic Tradition
Conclusion
Further Reading
References
9 An Account of Family Therapy in Bereavement One Mother’s Dying Legacy for Her Family
The Family
Session 1—Held in September
Session 2—Held Two Weeks Later
Session 3—Held in October
Session 4—Held in November
Session 5—Held in Late December
Session 6—Held in February
Session 7—Held in March
Session 8—Held in April
Session 9—Held in June
Session 10—Held in October
Discussion
Reference
Part III Family Grief Therapy in Particular Circumstances
10 Family Therapy in the Context of Traumatic Losses
Traumatic Loss
What Is Traumatic Loss?
Value of a Family Approach
Historical Perspective
Attachment Relationships as Sources of Support
Secondary Traumatization
Inclusion of Children in the Process
Clinical Considerations
The Intersection of Grief and Trauma
Establishing Safety within the Family Context
Family Resilience and Reality
Intervention Strategies
Assessment
Configurations of Traumatic Loss in the Family System
Perspective of the Clinician
Conclusion
Note
References
11 Family Therapy following Suicide
Suicide, Grief, and Trauma
Suicide, Grief, and Family Therapy
Sessions 1 and 2: Engagement, Reassurance, and Family Care
Discussion about Sessions 1 and 2
Session 3 Excerpts—Psycho-education to Mobilize Mutual Care, Trust, and Communication
Discussion about Session 3
Sessions 4 and 5: Relational Networks and Family Life Cycle
Sessions 6 and 7: Relational Repair and Communication
Session 8 Excerpts: The Body of Trust, Trauma, and Relational Repair
Discussion about Session 8
Session 10: Commemoration and Growth
The Family Care and Trust System
Family Communication and Social Processes after Suicide
Family Assessment and Cultural Considerations
How Can Family Therapy Help Suicide-Bereaved Families?
Conclusion
References
12 Family Therapy for the Unresolved Grief of Ambiguous Loss
The Nature of Ambiguous Loss
Linking Ambiguous Loss to Unresolved Grief
Why Family Therapy?
The Psychological Family
The Effects of Ambiguous Loss on Family Systems
Paradoxical Thinking
Six Key Guidelines for Therapy with Families Experiencing Ambiguous Loss
1 Finding Meaning
2 Tempering Mastery
3 Reconstructing Identity
4 Normalizing Ambivalence
5 Revising Attachment
6 Discovering Hope
Therapist Techniques
The Challenge: Developing Our Own Tolerance for Ambiguity and Unresolved Loss
Conclusion
References
13 Perinatal Loss Unforeseen Tragedy with Ongoing Grief Trajectories
Types of Perinatal Loss
Stillbirth
Neonatal Death
SIDS
Stillbirths
What Causes Stillbirth?
Impact on the Family
Information and Support
Neonatal Deaths
Neonatal Deaths: Known Causes
Socioeconomically Deprived Countries: A Century Behind
Impact of Neonatal Death on the Family
SIDS and Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths (SUID)
SIDS/SUID Causes
Family Responses to Infant Death
Evolution of Family Grief Programs
Grief Kits
Grief Gender Differences
The “Forgotten Mourners” in Families
Cultural Differences in Grief
Scope of Programs
Program Improvements
Conclusion
References
14 Family Bereavement Care after the Death of a Child
Prevalence
The Grief Experience
Normative and Adaptive Responses
Clinical Presentations of Grief
Factors that Contribute to Variability in Outcome
Communication within a Medical Environment
Communication with the Ill Child
Communication with Siblings
Family Relationships
Finding Sense and Meaning
Faith
Pre-death Suffering
Age and Gender
Place of Death
Family Therapy after the Death of a Child
Conclusion
Selected Resources for Grieving Parents and Surviving Children
Children’s Lifecycle Books
Books for Parents
Internet Resources
References
15 Care of Families with Children Anticipating the Death of a Parent
Background
Child Coping with Parental Illness
Parent and Family Factors
Childhood Bereavement
Developmental Context
How Children at Different Ages Understand Death
Infants and Toddlers (Newborns to 2 Years Old)
Preschoolers (3 to 6 Years Old)
School-Age Children (7 to 12 Years Old)
Adolescents (13 Years Old and Older)
General Support for Families
Anticipatory Communication with Children
Timing of Discussions with Children
Decisions about the Setting for End-of-Life Care in a Family Context
Visits between Ill Parents and Children
Legacy Leaving
Children’s Participation in Funerals and Memorial Services
Bereavement Interventions
Conclusion
Further Reading
References
16 Family-Centered Approach to Helping Older Grieving People
Understanding Human Grief
Understanding Older Adult Grief
Factors Affecting the Grief of Older Adults
Understanding Family-Centered Approaches to Helping Grieving Elders
Setting the Scene
Grief Therapy with the Bereaved Family
Healing Tasks for the Grieving Family
Task I: Sharing Acknowledgment of Death or Other Traumatic Loss
Task II: Sharing the Pain and Grief
Task III: Reorganizing the Family System
Task IV: Creating New Directions, Relationships, and Goals
Treatment Strategies
Conclusion
References
Part IV Future Directions
17 Families “At Risk” of Complicated Bereavement
Risk Factors in the Family System
Resilience and Dysfunction
Family-Level Risk Factors
Individual-Level Risk Factors
Other Potential Risk Factors to Consider
Other Aspects of Family Functioning to Consider
Evidence Base for Screening Families for Dysfunction in Medical Settings
Loss of Meaning and Its Impact on the Whole Family
Harnessing Family Involvement
Conclusion
References
18 The Family with Socioeconomic and Cultural Issues
An Overview of the Social Environment and Health
The Center for Interdisciplinary Health Disparities Research (CIHDR)
Social Isolation
Race and Ethnicity, Family Functioning, and Health
Key Challenges/Therapeutic Strategies
Socioeconomic and Employment Status, Family Functioning, and Health
Key Challenges/Therapeutic Strategies
Place (Migration), Family Functioning, and Health
Key Challenges/Therapeutic Strategies
Conclusion
References
19 Future Development and Dissemination of Models of Family Bereavement Care
Developmental Issues for Family Grief Therapy
Adult Focus of Family Models to Date
Improvement of Pediatric and Adolescent Models
People also search for Bereavement Care for Families 1st:
bereavement care for families
how to care for a grieving parent
how much is parental bereavement pay
bereavement care plans
family care/bereavement leave
Tags:
David W Kissane,Francine Parnes,Bereavement Care


