コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 aregiving, and Supporting caregivers through bereavement.
2 positively related to quality of life during bereavement.
3 viduals from increased mortality rates after bereavement.
4 ef episodes that are better accounted for by bereavement.
5 outcomes in symptomatic youth with parental bereavement.
6 SM-III and DSM-IV assign a special status to bereavement.
7 goodbye; and 3) donation as a comfort during bereavement.
8 f terminally ill patients and continues into bereavement.
9 tionships, and attending to family grief and bereavement.
10 the wake of a serious life stressor such as bereavement.
11 re important psychiatric sequelae of spousal bereavement.
12 ty and produce considerable levels of family bereavement.
13 troke in the offspring according to maternal bereavement.
14 gression, phase 1 or 2 trial enrollment, and bereavement.
15 factors and healthcare expenditures prior to bereavement.
16 scents in facing challenges brought about by bereavement.
17 distinct from normal processes of grief and bereavement.
18 mmunicating families improved by 6 months of bereavement.
19 ping highly distressed children to cope with bereavement.
20 appear similar to those associated with MVC bereavement.
21 nt period lasting until about 3 months after bereavement.
22 g, and compared them with effects from other bereavements.
24 4 treatment-seeking individuals experiencing bereavement, 212 eligible participants (mean [SD] age, 5
25 (35 [27%] individuals), bullying (28 [22%]), bereavement (36 [28%]), suicide in family or friends (17
26 be relevant to suicide (eg, abuse, bullying, bereavement, academic pressures, self-harm, and physical
31 blished, racial disparities in the burden of bereavement after such premature deaths are severely und
33 s with 99% confidence intervals for previous bereavement among case patients versus controls using co
35 des of uncomplicated depression triggered by bereavement and by other loss have similar symptom profi
36 d mental illness, but an association between bereavement and cancer risk has not been established.
37 easures of care in the year before and after bereavement and cardiovascular medication prescribing (l
38 ly examined the association between parental bereavement and cortisol response while accounting for p
39 r after bereavement, the association between bereavement and death is not primarily mediated through
42 diovascular care measures in the year before bereavement and reduced medication coverage after bereav
43 o estimate the association between childhood bereavement and risk of postconscription psychiatric dis
44 l studies of the association between partner bereavement and risk of zoster using electronic healthca
47 lems revealed an overall association between bereavement and subsequent full-scale IQ and matrix reas
49 s ratios for the association between partner bereavement and zoster were 1.05 (99% confidence interva
50 articularly through differential exposure to bereavement - and how it may give rise to distinct life
51 ng, domestic violence and abuse, and suicide bereavement) and examine how their influence on suicide
52 arger psychosocial issues, end-of-life care, bereavement, and a focus on the patient as opposed to th
53 to accurately diagnose anxiety, depression, bereavement, and organic brain syndromes to provide trea
56 current understandings of mortality change, bereavement as a public health threat, and population dy
57 symptoms evolved in complex ways during ICU bereavement, as characterized by heterogeneous trajector
58 hs, which means researchers can estimate the bereavement burden over the course of the epidemic in lo
60 validity of uniquely excluding uncomplicated bereavement but not uncomplicated reactions to other los
61 order (PTSD), and depressive disorder during bereavement, but symptom trajectories are often explored
62 attention has been directed towards suicide bereavement, but with little evidence to describe the ef
64 02 and 2006, we estimated the association of bereavement by age 10 years with four subtests of cognit
66 coaching sessions, monthly follow-up, and a bereavement call either early after enrollment or 3 mont
67 atalism related to stillbirth and to improve bereavement care are also clear, persisting priorities f
70 orkers, institutions, and systems must shift bereavement care from an afterthought to a public health
72 l for transitional care, firmly establishing bereavement care services within health-care institution
74 d a prolonged grief disorder at 13 months of bereavement compared with 3.3% of those who received 10
76 lity, isolation, relocation, caregiving, and bereavement-contributes to physiological changes, furthe
77 A unique innovation was the creation of a bereavement counseling and education service to provide
78 several separate positions, including family bereavement counseling and education, can substantially
80 s (Fifth Edition) (termed persistent complex bereavement disorder as a subtype of other specified tra
84 M-5 proposed criteria for persistent complex bereavement disorder in identifying putative cases of cl
86 re) were matched to DSM-5 persistent complex bereavement disorder, prolonged grief disorder, and comp
88 s (negative life events, anxiety/depression, bereavement, distress and job strain) and five main atop
89 adults after a major life stressor, such as bereavement, divorce, and job loss, or major health even
90 1973-2006, we investigated whether maternal bereavement during pregnancy is associated with stillbir
91 spouses' death records reveals a significant bereavement effect (relative mortality risks between 1.3
94 The findings support preserving the DSM-IV bereavement exclusion criterion for major depressive epi
95 These results question the validity of the bereavement exclusion for the diagnosis of major depress
97 tion of mixed anxiety depression, removal of bereavement exclusion), unclear clinical utility (e.g.,
101 e analyzed free-text narratives about recent bereavement experiences from 1,997 women aged 55-73 year
102 who survived Hurricane Katrina, we find that bereavement, fearing for loved ones' well-being, and lac
106 f death in persons who have suffered spousal bereavement has been described in many populations.
107 follow up did not alter the hazard ratio for bereavement (hazard ratio = 1.27, 95% confidence interva
108 endations for support services after suicide bereavement heavily rely on the voluntary sector with li
109 ntrol studies to examine the associations of bereavement (i.e., loss of a family member due to death)
110 g elderly population, the high prevalence of bereavement in aging individuals, and the marked physica
111 f the control women, we further investigated bereavement in association with human papillomavirus (HP
112 dle generation's (generation 2) experiencing bereavement in childhood due to the death of a parent (g
114 ontinue to experience considerable levels of bereavement in the coming decades, independent of the fu
115 I estimate that the reduction in maternal bereavement in the US during the twentieth century indir
118 s are not merely environmental cues but also bereavement-inducing events that can define histories pr
119 ion of the study is the lack of data on post-bereavement information on the quality of the parent-chi
126 Morbidity and mortality associated with bereavement is an important public health issue, yet eco
129 Collectively, our findings demonstrate that bereavement is associated with an increased risk of deve
130 whether early-life adversity experienced as bereavement is associated with chronic inflammatory heal
134 to be one mechanism through which childhood bereavement is associated with risk of psychiatric disor
136 three scales: the grief subscale of the Core Bereavement Items to assess normative grief; and the Int
138 e least-studied familial relationship in the bereavement literature is that of siblings, although los
139 ave stress-related and adjustment disorders; bereavement, major depression, and substance use disorde
141 g for age at parental death, sex, time since bereavement, maternal/paternal death, birth order, famil
142 vement and reduced medication coverage after bereavement may contribute to increased cardiovascular r
143 rents appear to need, want, and often access bereavement mental health services, which could be offer
145 ss disorder (PTSD), and PGD assessed over 24 bereavement months using multivariate hierarchical linea
146 We demonstrate that our estimates of the bereavement multiplier are stable across epidemiological
150 n prevalence scenarios, we estimate COVID-19 bereavement multipliers for White and Black individuals
151 entiment (emotional valence) in first-person bereavement narratives and standardized Patient Health Q
155 of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and bereavement normal latency-age children and adolescents
160 e review of studies of the effect of suicide bereavement on mortality, mental health, and social func
162 ncomplicated reactions, whether triggered by bereavement or other loss, are significantly lower than
163 the integrative framework of predictors for bereavement outcomes (intrapersonal, interpersonal, bere
165 stic understanding; risk factors for adverse bereavement outcomes included unfavorable circumstances
166 post-loss were significantly associated with bereavement outcomes, except for physical HRQOL and PGD
167 antly associated with ICU family surrogates' bereavement outcomes, suggesting targets to improve end-
171 lts suggest that it may not be the stress of bereavement, per se, that puts individuals at risk for l
173 a transient fall in prescribing in the peri-bereavement period lasting until about 3 months after be
177 CUs should consider developing comprehensive bereavement programs to support both families and the ne
178 meetings of senior clinicians with families, bereavement programs, and end-of-life care quality monit
179 n be experienced as a form of comfort during bereavement provided family members remain convinced the
180 d antecedents of abnormal stress response to bereavement, psychobiologic correlates of bereavement-re
181 es during palliative care and continued into bereavement reduced the severity of complicated grief an
188 f people whose illness met criteria for both bereavement-related depression and normal grief compared
190 or "normal grief." However, individuals with bereavement-related depression were slightly older, and
191 to bereavement, psychobiologic correlates of bereavement-related depression, and the long-term course
198 ment outcomes (intrapersonal, interpersonal, bereavement-related, and death-circumstance factors), em
200 s with other types of depression, those with bereavement-related, single, brief depressive episodes w
201 the follow-up period among participants with bereavement-related, single, brief episodes was signific
206 relative to the waitlisted group, while core bereavement scores were similar between groups (p=0.269)
207 ber 15, 2013: exposure to violence, parental bereavement, self-harm, traumatic brain injury, unintent
208 effectively implement and sustain integrated bereavement services are sorely lacking at national and
210 Recent research in childhood and adolescent bereavement shows how health professionals can support t
212 psychiatric sequelae to late-life attachment bereavement, some of the hypothesized antecedents of abn
213 measures were used to analyze the effects of bereavement status, psychiatric disorder in both offspri
214 mpact of a research-derived, semistructured, bereavement support group among HIV-1-seropositive and H
216 or culturally sensitive ethics education and bereavement support in different cultural contexts.
217 fe, spiritual and psychological support, and bereavement support in individuals with advanced cardiov
221 rience, including issues of life completion, bereavement support to families and attention to staff w
222 s may have implications for design of family bereavement support within pediatric oncology care, incl
225 nd prevention, survivorship, palliation, and bereavement.' Supportive care can be classified as prima
227 of psychosocial interventions for perinatal bereavement that can be delivered by midwives and nurses
231 y midwives/nurses for parents with perinatal bereavement, their impacts on bereaved parents' mental h
233 , can already be detected within 6 months of bereavement, underscoring the need for early screening t
234 ificantly lower than among participants with bereavement-unrelated, single, brief episodes and other
235 ef episodes were less likely than those with bereavement-unrelated, single, brief episodes to experie
236 % prescription coverage in the 30 days after bereavement was 0.80 (95% confidence interval, 0.73-0.88
237 ratio for mortality in the first year after bereavement was 1.25 (95% confidence interval: 1.18, 1.3
245 on, diabetes mellitus, stroke) and a partner bereavement were matched with a non-bereaved control gro
246 sive disorder during the first 6-8 months of bereavement, which raises concerns about recent trends t
247 Differences by diagnosis included parental bereavement, which was significantly higher in patients
248 surveyed at 6, 13, 18, and 24 months of post-bereavement with 11 items from the PG-13, the Impact of
249 association of young and middle-aged sibling bereavement with use of health services and risk of deve
250 annual measures was lower in the year before bereavement, with improvement in the year after, whereas
251 total of 26,646 (15.5%) couples experienced bereavement, with mean follow up after bereavement of 2
252 increase in depression was not explained by bereavement; women had greater odds of substantial depre
253 h, given the health risks posed by grief and bereavement, would add to the disadvantages that they fa
254 ion, and anxiety symptoms over the first two bereavement years among Taiwanese ICU bereaved who lost