Academic Search Premier. (2006). And then the Dog Died. Retrieved 10/26/2010
Kenneth Kaufman’s study on a particular case involving a child and how he deals with the bereavement of multiple family members and his dog compares the child’s reactions and displayed emotions between the loss of family members and the dog. How child recovered with support from teachers, friends, and family. Comparisons reported that were made by child and Kenneth in his findings.
CINAHL Plus. (2009). Investigating Adaptive Grieving Styles: a Delphi Study. Retrieved 10/29/2010
Elizabeth A. Doughty’s report on the reestablishment and confirmation of old grieving styles while giving findings on new adaptive grieving styles. She uses the Delphi Study Style to ask multiple expects and regulars in the field of grieving research and certified counselors. Consensus was reached on several new adapted grieving styles and findings were conclusive.
Academic Search Premier. (1997). Loss and the Grieving Process. Retrieved 10/27/2010
Mary L. Cappel gives a basic explanation of entire grieving process and self help model with recommendations for further counseling. Given from perspective of working in a professional atmosphere while being able to help coworkers and others with grief or trauma they may be dealing with. She gives examples of appropriate responses and attitudes for effectively managing self grief and others in business environment.
Lexis Nexus. (2003). The World: Dealing with Death; Confronting Grief, Not Burying it. Retrieved 10/17/2010
New York Times reporter Ari Goldman gives bigger picture on grief in the world. Relates and compares different religions and cultures styles and attitudes towards death and grieving. He mentions September 11 and other world calamities that have been publicly and privately grieved by millions. Ari gives examples from different cultures and how they remember those who died and keep on living for those who died.
Academic Search Premier. (2004). Traumatic Grief Among Adolescents Exposed to a Peer’s Suicide. Retrieved 10/27/2010
In depth six year study on 146 different friends and family members exposed to 26 different teen suicides. All those studied were close friends, family members, and acquaintances given questionnaires 6 months, 12-18 months and 36 months after the suicide. Article compares PTSD to Traumatic Grief and distinguishes a difference between the two. It also gives statistics of contracting Traumatic Grief as opposed to PTSD that were deduced from this study.
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/abstract/152/1/22