AIDS and the new orphans : coping with death

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

AIDS and the new orphans : coping with death

edited by Barbara O. Dane and Carol Levine ; foreword by Barbara Blum

Auburn House, 1994

  • pbk.

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780865692206

Description

By the year 2000, as many as 125,000 children under the age of 18 in the U.S. will have been orphaned by AIDS. Social services in major urban centers such as New York, Miami, Los Angeles, and Washington will be further overwhelmed by these new clients and their unique problems. In this book, experts on AIDS, bereavement, and children draw together and analyze research and practice models that may be vital to individual and public policy solutions. The first chapter sets the stage by examining how Western culture approaches death. Issues of spirituality and children are discussed next, and the following chapters deal with childhood bereavement among latency-age children and adolescents. The role of culture and ethnicity are examined in the Latino and Black communities. Also, the conflicts and problems that new guardians face as they attempt to build new and secure relationships with grieving youngsters are addressed. The book ends with an examination of four projects that are reaching children and families and gives recommendations to practitioners. This book is an invaluable examination of a problem of growing social concern for social, medical, and mental health professionals, public policy analysts, and the general public.
Volume

pbk. ISBN 9780865692497

Description

By the year 2000, as many as 125,000 children under the age of 18 in the U.S. will have been orphaned by AIDS. Social services in major urban centers such as New York, Miami, Los Angeles, and Washington will be further overwhelmed by these new clients and their unique problems. In this book, experts on AIDS, bereavement, and children draw together and analyze research and practice models that may be vital to individual and public policy solutions. The first chapter sets the stage by examining how Western culture approaches death. Issues of spirituality and children are discussed next, and the following chapters deal with childhood bereavement among latency-age children and adolescents. The role of culture and ethnicity are examined in the Latino and Black communities. Also, the conflicts and problems that new guardians face as they attempt to build new and secure relationships with grieving youngsters are addressed. The book ends with an examination of four projects that are reaching children and families and gives recommendations to practitioners. This book is an invaluable examination of a problem of growing social concern for social, medical, and mental health professionals, public policy analysts, and the general public.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Barbara Blum The New Orphans and Grieving in the Time of AIDS by Carol Levine Death and Bereavement by Barbara O. Dane Suffer the Little Children: The Child and Spirituality in the AIDS Crisis by Kenneth J. Doka Parental Loss and Latency Age Children by Karolynn Siegal and Barbara Freund Adolescents and Parental Death from AIDS by Luis Zayas and Kathleen Romano Latino Communities: Coping with Death by Esther Chachkes and Regina Jennings Black American Communities: Coping with Death by Penelope Johnson-Moore and Lucretia J. Phillips Bereavement and the New Guardians by Gary R. Anderson Programs for Children and Adolescents by Diane Grodney Appendix: Resource Guide Index

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