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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page research paper that examines the effect that SIDS has on the family involved. The writer argues that parental grief is often compounded by the medical community and authorities because of the erroneous belief that SIDS can be avoided through following recommendations of the medical community. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khsids.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
weeks later, sometimes a few months, what appeared to be a healthy infant is found dead. The grief and guilt that parents, in this situation, feel is so severe that
it can easily break up a marriage. When doctors began to diagnose these occurrences as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), parents had the consolation that the medical establishment said, in
so many words, that it wasnt their fault (Burnham 817). However, this scenario is once more changing. New recommendations for avoiding SIDS are so specific that once more parents
are being made to feel that they should bear responsibility for their childs death if they - for some reason - have failed to follow the recommended guidelines. Furthermore, the
heightened awareness of law enforcement officials to child abuse appears to have increased suspicions that some cases of SIDS are really due to abuse or neglect. This means that, while
granted some parents are guilty, for some poor families, SIDS not only means the loss of a beloved child, but also the humiliation and trauma of being unjustly accused of
causing the death. The following examination will show that while the recommendations for avoiding SIDS make sense, the facts are that medical experts still dont know - for a
fact - what causes SIDS. There is an all-too-human inclination to want to blame someone when tragedy occurs, but the indications are that SIDS is still a tragic occurrence for
which there is no definitive explanation. Statistics suggest that parents can reduce the chances of SIDS by following the recommendations, but they cannot eliminate the chance of SIDS by following
them. Therefore, there should be compelling evidence of abuse before authorities add to the burden that these parents already feel. Empirical evidence regarding the recommendations
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