BEREAVEMENT SERVICES IN ACUTE CARE SETTINGS

Families of acute care patients who die while receiving care face loss and grief in unfamiliar institutional environments. Informal bereavement assistance may occur in acute care settings, but formally organized service and planned follow-up work with bereaved family members is less common. A litera...

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Veröffentlicht in:Death studies 2000-01, Vol.24 (1), p.51-64
Hauptverfasser: Fauri, D P, Ettner, B, Kovacs, P J
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creator Fauri, D P
Ettner, B
Kovacs, P J
description Families of acute care patients who die while receiving care face loss and grief in unfamiliar institutional environments. Informal bereavement assistance may occur in acute care settings, but formally organized service and planned follow-up work with bereaved family members is less common. A literature review revealed little discussion of acute care-related bereavement services. The detrimental effects of long term, unresolved grief, however, are well-documented. Bereavement services help to reduce immediate physical and emotional distress while ameliorating long-term morbidity associated with unresolved grief. They may also reduce eventual costs for services and discomfort of illness by reducing the likelihood of stress-related illnesses occurring among survivors. Health care workers such as social workers, psychiatrists, chaplains, and nurses, who are familiar with the psychosocial needs of families and the structure and staffing of these settings, are well-positioned to organize assistance for those experiencing sudden loss. Developing a formal bereavement program in acute care settings involves description of the need, presenting the rationale for the service, identification of program elements, and determination of resource needs. Even in situations in which full services may not be possible, the provision of basic assessment and referral services will be beneficial to survivors while offering the institution several benefits.
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subjects Bereavement
Counseling
Death & dying
Emergency Medical Services
Emergency Service, Hospital
Families & family life
Grief
Health technology assessment
Humans
Leadership
Patients
Social Support
Survivors
title BEREAVEMENT SERVICES IN ACUTE CARE SETTINGS
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