-
Living with Illness
- Populations
- Advocating for Care
- Assessment Tools
- Caregiver/caregiving/providing care
- Communication
- Decisions / Decision making
- Dignity
- Conditions/Diseases
- Emotional Health
- Financial
- Nutrition / Hydration / Food / Eating / Drinking
- Palliative Care Emergency
- Palliative Sedation / Sedation for Palliative Purposes
- Research
- Symptoms/What to Expect
- Provinces
- Palliative Care
- Treatments/Interventions
- Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR)
- Remembering and memories
- Educators
- Author
- LMC
- Eating and Drinking
- Diets
- Final Days
- Grief / Loss / Bereavement
- Programs and Services
- For Professionals
- More
Resources
Complicated Grief in Canada: Exploring the Client and Professional Landscape
Description:
Complicated Grief in Canada: Exploring the Client and Professional Landscape
Marney R. Thompson, Allyson D. Whiteman, Karen D. Loucks, and Helena M. L. Daudt
JOURNAL OF LOSS AND TRAUMA
Bereavement Services, Victoria Hospice, British Columbia, Canada; Education and Research, Victoria Hospice
ABSTRACT: Complicated grief (CG) is one of the central themes in bereavement research and advanced clinical practice today. Using a mixed-methods approach, we wanted to learn (a) what tools Canadian practitioners used to identify or diagnose CG and (b) what interventions or strategies they used to address CG. Sixty-three professionals responded to our survey. There were no straightforward answers to these questions: the state-of-the art of CG in Canada is, in fact, complicated. Practitioners used a wide assortment of tools and strategies with no consensus on any one approach or tool. Building a Canadian CG community of practice was recommended.
Author(s):
Marney R. Thompson, Allyson D. Whiteman, Karen D. Loucks, and Helena M. L. Daudt
Year:
2017