Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
Online access with DDA: Askews (Medicine)
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Contents |
1. The parenting experience of loss -- 2. Smooth phase : preconception -- 3. Break-up : disequilibrium -- 4. Sorting-out phase : 12-24 weeks gestation -- 5. Inwardizing phase : 24-32 weeks gestation -- 6. Expansion phase : 32 weeks-birth -- 7. Preparation for labor and birth -- 8. "Neurotic" fitting-together phase : birth-first six weeks of life -- 9. Loss in a multi-fetal pregnancy -- 10. Fetal reduction in multi-fetal pregnancies -- 11. Heart-breaking choices -- 12. Offering a therapeutic educational support group -- 13. Bereaved parents raising children -- 14. What about the children? -- 15. Fathers : it affects me too -- 16. Holistic health care for bereaved parents |
Summary |
Despite research which highlights parents' increased anxiety and risk of attachment issues with the pregnancy that follows a perinatal loss, there is often little understanding that bereaved families may need different care in their subsequent pregnancies. This book explores the lived experience of pregnancy and parenting after a perinatal loss. Despite research which highlights parents' increased anxiety and risk of attachment issues with the pregnancy that follows a perinatal loss, there is often little understanding that bereaved families may need different care in their subsequent pregnancies. This book explores the lived experience of pregnancy and parenting after a perinatal loss. Meeting the Needs of Parents Pregnant and Parenting After Perinatal Loss develops a helpful framework, which integrates continuing bonds and attachment theories, to support prenatal parenting at each stage of pregnancy. Giving insight into how a parent's world view of a pregnancy may have changed following a loss, readers are provided with tools to assist parents on their journey. The book discusses each stage of a pregnancy, as well as labor and the postpartum period, before examining subjects such as multi-fetal pregnancies, reluctant terminations, use of support groups, and the experiences of fathers and other children in the family. The chapters include up-to-date research findings, vignettes from parents reflecting on their own experiences and recommendations for practice. Written for researchers, students and professionals from a range of health, social welfare and early years education backgrounds, this text outlines what we know about supporting bereaved families encountering the challenges of a subsequent pregnancy |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed July 22, 2016) |
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Legacy 2017 UoY |
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NBK-R 9999 UKUoY |
Subject |
Perinatal death.
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Bereavement.
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Psychic trauma.
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Parents -- Psychological aspects
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Pregnancy -- Psychological aspects.
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Death -- Psychological aspects.
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Perinatal Death
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Infant Mortality
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Attitude to Death
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Bereavement
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Parents -- psychology
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Psychological Trauma -- complications
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Pregnancy -- psychology
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mourning.
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MEDICAL -- Gynecology & Obstetrics.
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Death -- Psychological aspects
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Bereavement
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Parents -- Psychological aspects
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Perinatal death
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Pregnancy -- Psychological aspects
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Psychic trauma
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Warland, Jane, 1957- author
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ISBN |
9781317224013 |
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1317224019 |
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9781315622774 |
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1315622777 |
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1138655066 |
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9781138655065 |
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1138655074 |
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9781138655072 |
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9781317224020 |
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1317224027 |
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