Chapter 19: - wbphillipskhs
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Chapter 19:
Death, Dying, and Bereavement
In This Chapter
The Experience of Death
The Meaning of Death Across the Lifespan
The Process of Dying
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
The Experience of Grieving
The Experience of Death
Death Itself
Characteristics
Clinical death
Brain death
Social death
The Experience of Death
Where Death Occurs
Hospitals in the U.S. (45%)
Decedent’s home (25%)
Long-term Care (22%)
Hospice (14%)
Other (6%)
The Experience of Death
Hospice Care
Philosophy
Death viewed as normal
Families and the patient encouraged to
prepare for death
Family are involved in patient’s care
Control of care is in the hands of the patient
and family
Medical care is palliative rather than curative
Hospice Care
Types of Hospice Care
Home-based programs
Hospital-based programs
Special hospice centers
Hospice
Hospice
Hospital-based and Home-based Care
Comparison
Hospital-Based Care
Home-Based Care
Patient Pain
Same
Same
Length of Survival
Same
Same
Patient Satisfaction with
Care
Same
Same
Family Satisfaction with
Care
Higher
Lower
Family Sense of Burden
Higher
Lower
Let’s take a minute to review some of these comparisons.
Dying, Death, and Bereavement
Hospice Care
Hospice Care
Pros
Reduced cost of death
Less burden on central caregiver
Cons
Increased family worry about pain
management
Developmental Understanding
of Death
The Meaning of Death for Adults
Death as Loss: Age
Age differences
Young adults: Loss of opportunity to
experience things; loss of family
relationships
Older adults: Loss of time to complete inner
work
The Meaning of Death for Adults
Death as Loss: Ethnic Differences
Ethnic differences
Mexican Americans: Increase time spent with
family or loved ones
White and African-Americans: Would not
change their lifestyle
See Table 19.2 for responses to hypothetical
impending death
Stop and Think!
At what age do you think
people are most fearful of
death?
What prompted your answer?
Fear of Death
Middle-aged adults most fearful of death
Sense of unique invulnerability prevents
intense fear of death in young adults
Older adults think and talk more about death
than anyone else
Fear of Death
Religious beliefs
Religious beliefs and fear of death
Very religious adults less afraid of death
Those totally irreligious may also fear
death less
Figure 19.1
Age, Ethnicity and Fear of Death
Fear of Death
Personal Worth
Fear of death reduced
Adults accomplish goals or believe they
have become the person they set out to be
Belief that life has purpose or meaning
How is this related to Erikson’s stage of
integrity versus despair?
Questions To Ponder
Your loved one is dying of a terminal illness.
Would you use a hospice center? Why or
why not?
If you were told that you had a terminal disease
and only 6 months to live, how would you
want to spend your time until you died?
On a scale of 1– 5, with 5 being high, how much
do you fear death?
The Process of Dying
Preparation for Death
Kinds of preparations
Practical preparations
Deeper preparations
Older adults more likely to have made
these arrangements
The Process of Dying
Preparation for Death
Final preparations
Unconscious changes just before death
Terminal drop for psychological health
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’s Stages of Dying
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Criticisms of Kubler-Ross’s Theory
Methodological problems
Cultural specificity
Stage concept unsupported
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Alternate Views
Two additional views
Shneidman: Dying process has many “themes”
Corr: Coping with death involves taking care of
specific tasks
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Responses to Impending Death
Greer: Attitudes and behavioral choices can
influence course of terminal disease
Five groups/stages
Denial (positive avoidance)
Fighting spirit
Stoic acceptance
Helplessness/hopelessness
Anxious preoccupation
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Responses to Impending Death
Greer concluded that the message may be:
“Those who struggle the most, fight the
hardest, express their anger and hostility
openly, and who find some sources of joy in
their lives live longer.”
Theoretical Perspectives on Dying
Psychoanalytic Theory
Traumatic death often followed by physical
or mental problems
Grief therapy with children makes use of
defense mechanisms (sublimation,
identification)
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Freud: Death of a loved one is an emotional
trauma
Ego tries to insulate itself from unpleasant
emotions through defense mechanisms such as
denial
BUT
Defense mechanisms provide only temporary
relief
How do people grieve in healthy ways?
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Attachment Theory
Bowlby
Intense grief likely to occur at loss of any
attachment figure
Quality of attachment related to grief
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Attachment Theory
Bowlby: Four stages of grief
Numbness
Yearning
Disorganization and despair
Reorganization
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Attachment Theory
Sanders five stages of grief comparable to
Bowlby:
Shock
Awareness
Conservation/withdrawal
Healing
Renewal
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Attachment Theory
Revisionist Views
Avoiding expressions of grief neither
prolongs grief nor inevitably creates mental
health problems
Grieving does not occur in fixed stages
Many themes present simultaneously but
one or another may dominate at one point in
time
Adults develop different patterns of grieving
Figure 19.2
Jacobs’s Model of Grieving
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Patterns of Grieving
Wortman and Silver
Normal
Chronic
Delayed
Absent
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Dual-Process Model
Alternates between:
Confrontation
Restoration
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
The Experience of Grieving: Death Rituals
Psychosocial functions of death rituals such
as funerals
Help family and friends manage grief by
giving a specific set of roles
Bring family members together in unique
ways
Establish shared milestones for families
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
The Process of Grieving
Factors Associated with Grief: Age of the
Bereaved
Children express feelings of grief like teens
and adults
Teens often show prolonged grief responses
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Factors Associated with Grief
Modes of Death and Grief
Caregiver widows may show depression.
Death with intrinsic meaning reduces grief.
Sudden and violent deaths evoke more
intense grief.
Suicide produces unique responses in
survivors.
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Widowhood and Effects of Grief
Immediate and long term effects on the
immune system
Incidence of depression among widows and
widowers rises substantially
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Pathological Grief
Depression-like symptoms lasting longer
than 2 months
Grief lasting longer than 6 months can lead
to long-term depression and physical
ailments
Problems may continue for up to 2 years
after death of loved one
BUT cultural practices may mimic
pathological grief
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Sex Differences
Spouse death more negative for men than
for women.
Risk of death higher in men immediately
after a spouse’s death.
Widowers withdraw in multiple ways.
Alcohol use may influence depression.
Social relationships remain important for
both sexes.
Theoretical Perspectives on Grieving
Preventing Long-Term Problems
“Talk-it-out” approach to managing grief can help
prevent grief-related depression.
Developing coherent personal narrative of events
surrounding spouse’s death helps manage grief.
Participating in support groups helps.
Appropriate amount of time off from work to grieve
is important.