Literature Review
All posts tagged with “Clinical News | Grief & Bereavement News.”
WVU Medicine Hospice hosts annual ‘Gift of Lights’ remembrance ceremony
12/07/23 at 03:48 AMWVU Medicine Hospice hosts annual ‘Gift of Lights’ remembrance ceremonyWBOY-TV (Clarksburg, WV)December 5, 2023WVU Medicine Hospice held a Gift of Light service at United Hospital Center in Bridgeport Tuesday night. Names were read of the loved ones who were remembered this holiday season and family members were able to light a battery-operated candle in remembrance of their them and to celebrate their lives. The family members and caregivers in attendance were given Christmas tree ornaments to honor their loved one who has passed. A tree will also be lit in the hospice garden near the Louis A. Johnson VA Medical Center. Hospice officials said the service gives families a chance to get together and share memories and stories of their loved ones with others.
Guthrie held its Tree for Life event
12/06/23 at 04:00 AMGuthrie held its Tree for Life eventWENY-TV (Horseheads, NY)December 4, 2023Sayre, PA—Guthrie Robert Packer Hospital held its annual ‘Tree for Life’ event to support the Guthrie Hospice. This is the 34th year the hospital held the event. and many gathered to honor their loved ones.
Why are the holidays so hard?
12/06/23 at 03:50 AMWhy are the holidays so hard?Jenn Flaum, LCSW, MBAExecutive Director, Heartlight Center, Denver, COThe holiday season can be filled with emotions that can be more profound and surprising than other times of the year, especially for individuals who are grieving. Subsequently, it is common for us to ask the question: Why are the holidays so hard? Editor Note: The author includes several suggestions that may be helpful for you, your patients, and their family members.
Never Visit a Dying Person
12/05/23 at 04:00 AMNever Visit a Dying PersonBy Virginia A. Simpson, PhDNext AvenueDecember 1, 2023Before a fit of disgust at my callousness takes over, I’m going tell you what I mean when I say, Never visit a dying person. After a young woman named Beyhan died, her friends put together her words and published a small book called “Beyhan’s Journey.” Beyhan said, I could always tell when someone was visiting a dying person. She meant that because they no longer saw her as the person she still was, they treated her differently. The message is this: Visit the person, not their disease, diagnosis or prognosis.[Editor’s Note: The author has worked with dying and grieving people for more than 38 years. She’s the author of “The Space Between: A Memoir of Mother-Daughter Love at the End of Life.”]
Savannah Hospice honors loved ones for the holidays
12/05/23 at 04:00 AMSavannah Hospice honors loved ones for the holidaysWTGS-TV (Savannah, GA)December 3, 2023Savannah, GA—Hospice Savannah hosted their 32nd annual Tree of Light Memorial Ceremony on Sunday. The memorial honored the memory of loved ones during the holiday season.
Light-a-Life Tree Lighting for Hospice Buffalo
12/05/23 at 04:00 AMLight-a-Life Tree Lighting for Hospice BuffaloWKBW-TV (Buffalo, NY)December 2, 2023Buffalo, NY—Hospice and Palliative Care Buffalo hosted its 35th annual Light-a-Life Memorial Tree Lighting Ceremony. This is a longstanding tradition that provides an opportunity to remember loved ones who were cared for by Hospice and Palliative Care Buffalo.
It’s OK to Never ‘Get Over’ Your Grief
12/05/23 at 04:00 AMIt’s OK to Never ‘Get Over’ Your GriefBy Mikolaj Slawkowski-Rode, MA, PhDNew York TimesDecember 3, 2023Over the past century, traditional mourning practices have fallen out of favor in the West. Black is now usually worn only to a funeral, and not always then. But traditional mourning practices were designed to do just that: to preserve a place for the dead among the living, to help mourners carry the weight of their grief not by getting over it but by maintaining their relationship with the deceased (as metaphysically suspect as that might sound to modern ears). Today we are encouraged to step out from the shadow loss casts over our lives and return to happiness. ... This approach to grief and mourning might seem to be a good thing, like picking yourself up after a fall. It is arguably less morbid, with its emphasis on “getting closure” and “moving on” in a process whose goal is “healing.” But I fear the benefits do not outweigh the costs. ... [Editor’s Note: The author is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Warsaw and a research fellow at Blackfriars Hall at the University of Oxford. He is the editor of “The Meaning of Mourning: Perspectives on Death, Loss, and Grief.”]
A woman’s hospice death leads to a police standoff at an Orange home
12/05/23 at 03:50 AMA woman’s hospice death leads to a police standoff at an Orange homeKBMT-TV (Beaumont, TX)December 2, 2023Orange, TX—SWAT responded to a standoff at a house in Orange after a husband didn’t want his wife’s body be taken away. Around 7 p.m. a call was made about a woman in hospice passing away, according to Orange Police Sergeant Isaac T. Henry III. Soon after a hospice nurse called saying the husband made suicidal and threatening comments to people because he was upset that his wife had passed away, Henry told 12News crew at the scene. When Orange police responded there was a short standoff2. The husband eventually came out of the house and is now going to have a mental evaluation, according to Henry.
New Grief Resources for the Holidays
12/04/23 at 04:00 AMNew Grief Resources for the HolidaysPress Release 12/3/23Composing Life Out of Loss offering multiple grief resources for individuals and providers.
This grief therapist draws on her own experience with loss to help others
12/03/23 at 04:00 AMThis grief therapist draws on her own experience with loss to help othersOrange County RegisterNovember 30, 2023Claire Bidwell Smith is no stranger to grief. She lost both of her parents to cancer at a young age—her mother when she was 18, and her father when she was 25. “I entered into my adult life with a lot of grief and was just trying to figure out everything that had happened to me. After my mom died, everybody was like ‘You’ll be fine. You’re an adult, just go forward into your life.’ And I wasn’t fine. It was really, really hard.” ... Based in Santa Monica, Smith initially worked in hospice before starting a private practice as a grief therapist, now facilitating online grief support groups and in-person retreats. And she never stopped writing. Smith has published three nonfiction books about grief; her new book, “Conscious Grieving,” comes out in March 2024.