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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Memory and connection in maternal grief: Harriet Beecher Stowe, Emily Dickinson, and the bereaved mother

Provenzano, Retawnya M. 12 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / This essay explores a broad range of literary works that treat long-term grief as a natural response to the death of a child. Literary examples show gaps in the medical and social sciences’ considerations of grief, since these disciplines judge bereaved mothers’ grief as excessive or label it bereavement disorder. By contrast, authors who employ the ancient storyline of child death illuminate maternal grieving practices, which are commonly marked with a vigilance that expresses itself in wildness. Many of these authors treat grief as a forced pilgrimage, but question the possibility of returning to a previous state of psychological balance. Instead, the mothers in their stories and poems resist external pressure for closure and silence and favor lasting memory. Harriet Beecher Stowe, in Uncle Tom’s Cabin, and Emily Dickinson, in letters to bereaved mother Susan Gilbert Dickinson and in the poetry included in these letters, represent maternal child loss as compelling a movement into a new state and emphasize the lasting pain and disruption of this loss.
12

Exploration de l’expérience du deuil parental : une étude rétrospective auprès de parents dont l’enfant est décédé d’un cancer au CHU Sainte-Justine

Dumont, Émilie 03 1900 (has links)
Objectifs : Pour les parents, vivre le deuil d'un enfant atteint d'un cancer est un cheminement complexe et douloureux dont il est difficile de comprendre tous les enjeux, en particulier ce qui influence la santé psychologique et la qualité de vie à long terme. Les objectifs étaient 1/ de décrire la qualité de vie, la détresse psychologique et les symptômes de deuil de parents endeuillés, 2/ d'explorer l’influence du sexe et du temps écoulé depuis le décès sur les résultats aux tests de santé psychologique, et 3/ d’identifier des prédicteurs de la santé psychologique actuelle des parents. Méthode : Une analyse quantitative rétrospective a été effectuée auprès de 32 mères et 14 pères d'enfants décédés du cancer au CHU Sainte-Justine. Ceux-ci ont rempli un questionnaire en ligne comportant le Medical Outcomes Study Short Form (SF-12), le Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18) et l’Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG-19). Résultats : Les symptômes de deuil des parents demeurent très présents, jusqu'à 18 ans après le décès. La majorité (58 %) des parents rapportent un deuil compliqué rétrospectivement. La plupart des mères rapportent des symptômes de deuil importants, ainsi qu’un changement significatif entre la première année après le décès et maintenant comparativement aux pères. Enfin, les prédicteurs de la qualité de vie et de la détresse psychologique nous renseignent sur des modèles de vulnérabilité de la santé psychologique des parents, tel qu’être père, avoir des symptômes élevés de deuil et peu de temps écoulé entre le décès et la complétion du questionnaire. Conclusion : Cette étude permet de nous informer sur les effets du deuil. Les résultats suggèrent qu'un suivi des parents endeuillés est nécessaire, même longtemps après le décès de leur enfant. / Objectives: For parents, grieving the loss of a child from cancer is a complex and painful journey for which we do not understand all the issues, in particular, what influences psychological health and long-term quality of life and more specifically the situation of fathers. This study was conducted with parents two to twenty years after the death of their child. The objectives are 1/ to describe the quality of life, psychological distress, and bereavement symptoms of bereaved parents, 2/ to explore the influence of gender and time since death on psychological health test results, and 3/ to identify predictors of parents' current psychological health. Methods: A retrospective quantitative analysis carried out was conducted with 32 mothers and 14 fathers of children who died of cancer at Sainte-Justine UHC between 2000 and 2016 were recruited and completed a self-reported online questionnaire using Medical Outcomes Study Short Form (SF-12), Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18) and Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG-19). Results: Parents’ symptoms of grief continue to be very present, even up to 18 years after death (58%). Mostly mothers recall very significant symptoms of grief. They report a significant change between the first year after death and now which is less true for fathers. Finally, the predictors of Quality of Life and distress provide us with information on vulnerability patterns: being a father, having high symptoms of grief, and short time elapsed since death. Conclusion: Understanding the differences between fathers’ and mothers’ grief is important for health professionals to better support both bereaved parents efficiently. The results suggest that a follow-up of bereaved parents is needed, even long after the death of their child.

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