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                                       Details for article 65 of 66 found articles
 
 
  When a Baby Dies: Ambiguity and Stillbirth
 
 
Title: When a Baby Dies: Ambiguity and Stillbirth
Author: Cacciatore, Joanne
DeFrain, John
Jones, Kara L. C.
Appeared in: Marriage & family review
Paging: Volume 44 (2008) nr. 4 pages 439-454
Year: 2008-11-14
Contents: Stillbirth, or sudden intrauterine death, is in many ways an invisible death. A stillborn infant is one mature enough developmentally to have lived outside the womb but for some reason, or perhaps multiple reasons, was born dead. Stillborn infants are often demarcated from other types of child death and are rarely legitimized as a real loss. When a baby is stillborn, mothers, fathers, surviving siblings, and grandparents may struggle for years to find answers to a series of complex and inherently unanswerable questions. The family members' profound feelings of grief and ambiguity loss are borne in a social environment that denies this reality because the child's death was invisible to most of the world. Boss's framework for understanding ambiguous loss proves quite helpful in thinking about stillbirth.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 65 of 66 found articles
 
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