Personal loss in health professions graduate students: implications for clinical education in bereavement

Authors

  • Katherine P Supiano

Keywords:

bereavement care education, graduate students, personal loss, meaning-making

Abstract

Abstract

The impact of prior personal grief on the educational experience of health care graduate students participating as co-facilitators in bereavement support groups was examined in this study. Personal experience with the death of a family member or close friend was reported in 80% of participating students. Findings suggest that grief, and the students’ construction of the meaning of their loss, can mediate the students’ developing sense of self as a professional helper. Active engagement with grieving persons, the opportunity for self-disclosure and reflection, and teacher–facilitator provision of emotional guidance and modeling contributed positively to learning.

References

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Supiano, KP and Vaughn-Cole, B. 2011. The impact of personal loss on the experience of health professions: graduate students in end-of-life and bereavement care. Death Studies, 35(1): 73–89.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

First Person