학술논문

Fathers’ Experience After the Death of Their Child (Aged 1–17 Years).
Document Type
Article
Source
Omega: Journal of Death & Dying; Sep2016, Vol. 73 Issue 4, p308-325, 18p, 2 Charts
Subject
Fathers' attitudes
Bereavement
Interviewing
Phenomenology
Medical research personnel
Nurses
Research funding
Attitudes toward death
Thematic analysis
Québec (Province)
Language
ISSN
00302228
Abstract
The death of a child is traumatic for parents. The grief of bereaved fathers is inadequately understood since most studies on this subject have focused primarily on mothers. The goal of this phenomenological study was to understand fathers’ experiences following the death of their child. Interviews were conducted with 13 fathers whose child (aged 1–17 years) had died at least 1 and up to 6 years earlier, either from a life-limiting illness or unexpectedly in an intensive care unit in a pediatric hospital in Eastern Canada. The analysis indicates that fathers’ experience deep suffering after the death of their child and feel torn between the past and the future. Three major themes were identified: needing to push forward in order to avoid breakdown, keeping the child present in everyday life, and finding meaning in their experience of grief. Clinical implications for professionals working with this population are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]