news bulletin  
     
 

Couples Can Overdo Being Supportive
February 1, 2010, Science Daily

 
     
 

Prayer Increases Forgiveness, Study Shows
February 1, 2010, Science Daily

 
 

 

 
 

Nine psychological tasks for a good marriage
American Psychological Association

 
     
 

His or Hers Jealousy? New Explanation for Sex Differences in Jealousy
January 31, 2010, Science Daily

 
     
 

Couples with Shared Identity Better at Conflict Resolution
January 29, 2010, PsychCentral

 
     
 

Same-sex couples can be effective parents, researchers find
January 21, 2010, USA Today

 
     
   
     
   
     
   
     
   
     
   

 

death & dying
 

Not only is preparing for the end of life challenging and rewarding, research shows that it can also lower stress and improve quality of life for both patients and families. The process of making end-of-life plans goes more smoothly if patients and families talk openly and honestly and view this natural phase as a time for personal growth. End-of-life decisions often include: making care-related goals, choosing a type of palliative or hospice care, picking where the final days will be spent, and deciding which treatments will be given. Putting these decisions in writing makes the patient’s requests unmistakable to families and health care providers and helps create a secure and calm decision-making environment.



helpful links

End of Life Issues
Medline Plus

topic: death & dying
American Psychological Association (APA)

For patients and families facing life-threatening illness...
Hospice

Living with an Illness
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

Grieving a Loss
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization

End-of-life Issues and Care
APA

The Role of Psychology in End-of-Life Decisions
and Quality of Care

APA


coping

Care of the Family
StopPain.org

Doctor, How Long Have I Got?
Harvard Medical School

End of Life: Helping with Comfort and Care
National Institute on Aging


psychology topics
abuse bipolar disorder obesity/weight management
addictive disorders borderline/narcissistic schizophrenia
adult development dementia/alzheimer's school violence
ad/hd depression suicide
anxiety eating disorders

daily life
anger infants/parenting teenagers/parenting
back to school integrated health care stress management
career development marriage/family/relationships spiritual/existential concerns
children/parenting men's issues women's issues
chronic illness older adults/aging 9/11 and military resources
death/dying people skills
divorce pregnancy  

 
Updated: February 1, 2010
 


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