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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper. The loss of a child is the most devastating, the most stressful experience a person can have. This essay begins by reporting data regarding the numbers of infants and children who die each year. The essay then explains the types of guilt the parent suffers, the grieving process of parents, including the phases of the grief cycle, factors that interfere with the grief process, the effect on siblings and the things that will help the parent through the grief. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGdthch.RTF
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
go first. Losing a child is the very worst experience a parent can have. Researchers agree that losing a child is the most stressful event a parent can experience (The
Compassionate Friends, 2007; Lamb, 2005; NSIDRC, 2005; Cox, 2004; Field, 2003; Hill, 2002). The parents of more than 50,000 children face this challenge every year (Field, 2003). There are far
fewer deaths in childhood today than fifty years ago but that is no comfort to those who lose an infant or child. Cox (2004) reported 5,600 children die each year
from unintentional injuries. Field (2003) reports the percentage of infant/child deaths per age group: Neonatal = 34.3 percent (Field, 2003). Post-neonatal = 16.9 percent (Field, 2003). 1-4 years = 9.6
percent (Field, 2003). 5-9 years = 6.4 percent (Field, 2003). 10-14 years = 7.6 percent (Field, 2003). 15-19 years = 25.3 percent (Field, 2003). To be clear, 15.3 percent of
all childhood deaths occur between the ages of 15 and 19. Accidents cause more deaths of children over the age of 1 year than any other cause (Field, 2003). Over
the age of 15, homicide and suicide begin claiming lives in the thousands (Field, 2003). Accidents, murder and suicide add even more complexities to coping with the death of a
child because they are sudden. NSIDRC (2005) wrote: Sudden death is a contradiction to everything that is known to be true in life. Losing a child to sudden death
is a disruption in the natural law and order of life. It is a heartbreak like no other. Parental grief is different from other losses-it is intensified, exaggerated and lengthened.
Parents who have lost a child say that grief never ends, it continues throughout life (NSIDRC, 2005). This is why this type of extreme grief is referred to by this
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