Give Sorrow Words

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A01=Dorothy Judd
Anticipatory Mourning
Author_Dorothy Judd
Bad News
bone
Bone Marrow Transplant
care
Category=JMAF
child
Child Psychotherapist
Child's Emotional State
childhood bereavement support
Children's Hospice
Children’s Hospice
Child’s Emotional State
Chronic Graft Versus Host Disease
Dora Black
emotional impact of terminal illness
end of life ethics
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family-centred care
Fatal Prognosis
Gastro Enteritis
Give Sorrow Words
Graft Versus Host Disease
Haematology Consultant
Helen House
Hickman Catheter
Hickman Lines
Jeremy Whelan
Leukaemic Children
marrow
Non-therapeutic Research
paediatric
paediatric counselling techniques
paediatric psycho-oncology
Paediatric Social Worker
palliative
Palliative Care
Play Things
Progressive Disease
psychological interventions for dying children
psychotherapist
social
Terminal Care
transplant
Unpleasant Treatments
Violated
White Cell
worker

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367101633
  • Weight: 720g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jun 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Though there has been much written about dying and bereavement in recent years, the particular stress of terminal illness in childhood - as it affects both the families and the professionals - is only beginning to be better understood. In this book Dorothy Judd, a child psychotherapist who has worked with ill, disabled and dying children and adolescents for many years, places her clinical experience in the context of a full understanding of death, the moral and ethical issues raised by some of the treatments for life-threatening illness, and the current research into new developments in approaches to terminal illness. At the heart of the book is a very moving diary of Judd's work with Robert, a seven-year-old suffering from leukaemia. Judd's account of therapeutic work in the hospital setting, away from the privacy of the consulting room, will be of special interest to mental health professionals. Give Sorrow Words combines great sensitivity to the experience of terminal illness with an astute awareness of the more theoretical debates in this increasingly important area of research.
Dorothy Judd

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