Chapter 17: Death, Dying and Grieving Flashcards

1
Q

What did Kastenbaum argue about the death system?

A

It serves a variety of important cultural functions, like warnings/predictions, death prevention, caring for dying, disposal of dead, social consolidation, making sense of death and killing.

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2
Q

What percentage of Canadians die in hospitals?
Nursing homes?
Hospices/home deaths?

A

60%, 10%, 30%

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3
Q

What is brain death? What are the ethics involved in this?

A

Neurological definition based on a lack of neural electrical activity. Technology can sustain life even after cortical brain death (with activity in the brain stem still).

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4
Q

What is advance care planning?

A

Considering and communicating their wishes for burial, organ donation, wills, resuscitation, funeral organization as they prepare for death.

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5
Q

What is euthanasia?

A

Painlessly ending the life of someone suffering from incurable disease/severe disability

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6
Q

Is active or passive euthanasia legal in canada?

A

Passive

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7
Q

What is a hospice?

A

Program committed to making end of life relatively comfortable

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8
Q

What is Pallative care?

A

Reducing pain and suffering in patients. Emphasized in hospices.

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9
Q

What are the causes of death throughout the lifespan? (Prenatal, few days after birth, few months after birth, childhood, adolescents, young adults, older adults)

A
Misscarriage/stillborn
Birth defect/immature development
SIDS
Accident/illness
Accident/suicide/homicide
Accident
Heart disease/cancer
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10
Q

Young children often confuse death with ____.

A

Sleep

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11
Q

Children 6-9 years believe that death can be ____.

A

reversed

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12
Q

After what age do children understand that death is final?

A

9 years

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13
Q

What are Kubler-Ross’ 5 stages of dying? Are these stages chronical?

A
Denial/isolation
Anger
Bargaining
Depression
Acceptance

People often jump back and forth between phases.

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14
Q

6 months after the loss of a loved one, __-__% of individuals have difficulty moving on.

A

10-20%

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15
Q

What is disenfranchised grief?

A

Grief over a deceased individual that can’t be openly mourned

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16
Q

What is disenfranchised grief?

A

Grief over a deceased individual that can’t be openly mourned. It can reemerge later in life

17
Q

What are the two main stressors of the dual-process model of coping with bereavement? What is characterized as effective coping strategy?

A

Loss-orientated stressors

Restoration-oriented stressors. Oscillating between loss and restoration is effective.