- Results found in: Resources
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Dr. Bateman discusses how to share, ritualize, and transform grief. She speaks about lifelines to the dead and illustrates creative outcomes to mourning that allow one to recognize, contain, release,...
- Results found in: The Exchange
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... exploration are included, derived from the data. Though the questions have not been tested, they speak to the grief reactions and situations that participants discussed and include questions that participants...
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... patients, spiritual leaders, and healthcare providers working with those at the end of life also speak of death as a teacher, reminding us that in spite of the many losses at this stage of life there...
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... expressing suffering and despair. Unfortunately, most of us lack confidence in our ability to speak about fears, sadness, anger, regrets, life’s meaning and purpose – that is, to explore the non-physical...
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... Hawking living with the devastating effects of ALS – ventilator-dependent, paralyzed and unable to speak – uses a single remaining muscle in his cheek to communicate, at the rate of one word per minute,...
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... satisfaction. They provide a sense of emotional safety for the participants that allows them to speak more freely than if they were in a face-to-face group. Being able to express difficult thoughts and...
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... we should know about each others wishes, to make sure we each get what we want?” You can also speak with your doctor and ask him or her about an advance directive and naming a healthcare proxy — that...
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... It was started with a cautious very low 2. 5 mg. day dose which was gradually increased. Her speaking and interactions improved substantially. It took 3 months with incremental increases in dosage to reach...
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... ward I had met his wife a few times. One day the sister (head nurse) called me into her office to speak to her and the patient’s wife. A request had been made by his wife to let him go home for the weekend.
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Case Study: The son stopped me at the elevator. “I have to speak to you seriously. Do you have a minute?” He had been a previous medical colleague of mine “Sure,” as I walked with him to a quiet corner...