Grief and Loss Across the Lifespan, Second Edition

(Michael S) #1
References 313

Faber, A., & Mazlish, E. (1998). Siblings without rivalry: How to help your children live together,
so you can live too. New York, NY: HarperCollins. (Original work published 1987)
Fajgenbaum, D., Chesson, B., & Lanzi, R. G. (2012). Building a network of grief sup-
port on college campuses: A national grassroots initiative. Journal of College Student
Psychotherapy, 26 , 99–120. doi:10.1080/87568225.2012.659159
Falconer, K., Sachsenweger, M., Gibson, K., & Norman, H. (2011). Grieving in the inter-
net age. New Zealand Journal of Psychology, 40 (3), 79–88.
Fanos, J. H., Little, G. A., & Edwards, W. H. (2009). Candles in the snow: Ritual and
memory for siblings of infants who died in the intensive  care nursery. Journal
of Pediatrics, 154 (6), 849–853. Retrieved from http://www.unboundmedicine
.com/medline/citation/19342063/Candles_in_the_snow:_ritual_andmemory
for_ siblings_of_infants_who_died_in_the_intensive_carenursery
Farrant, B., & Watson, P. (2003). Health care delivery: Perspectives of young people
with chronic illness and their parents. Journal of Pediatric Child Health, 40 , 175–179.
doi:10.1016/j.pedhc.2010.08.005
Farrell, F., & Hutter, J. J. (1980). Living until death: Adolescents with cancer. Health and
Social Work, 5 (4), 35–38.
Faust Piro, C. (2009). Baby James. In C. A. Walter & J. L. M. McCoyd (Eds.), Grief and
loss across the lifespan: A biopsychosocial perspective (pp. 89–94). New York, NY:
Springer Publishing.
Fenge, L., & Fannin, A. (2009). Sexuality and bereavement: Implications for practice
with older lesbians and gay men. Practice: Social Work in Action, 21 (1), 35–46.
doi:10.1080/09503150902745997
Feygin, D. L., Swain, J. E., & Leckman, J. F. (2006). The normalcy of neurosis:
Evolutionary origins of obsessive-compulsive disorder and related behav-
iors. Progress  in  Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry, 30 , 854–864.
doi:10.1016/j.pnpbp.2006.01.009
Field, N. P., & Wogrin, C. (2011). The changing bond in therapy for unresolved loss: An
attachment theory perspective. In R. A. Neimeyer, D. L. Harris, H. R. Winokuer, &
G. F. Thornton, (Eds.), Grief and bereavement in contemporary society: Bridging research
and practice (pp. 37–56). New York, NY: Routledge.
Field, P., & Filanosky, C. C. (2010). Continuing bonds, risk factors for compli-
cated grief, and adjustment to bereavement. Death Studies, 34 (1), 1–29.
doi:10.1080/07481180903372269
Findley, P. (2010). Returning veterans, traumatic brain injury, and Veterans’
Administration services. In T. S. Kerson, J. L. M. McCoyd, & Associates (Eds.),
Social work in health settings (3rd ed., pp. 179–189). London, UK: Routledge.
Fink, D. S., Gallaway, S., & Millikan, A. (2013). Assessment of subthreshold and devel-
oping behavioral health concerns among U.S. army soldiers. Military Medicine,
178 , 1188–1195. doi:10.7205/MIL.MED-D-13-0024
Finkbeiner, A. K. (1996). After the death of a child: Living with loss through the years.
New York, NY: Free Press.
Fleisher, B., & Reese, T. (2013). The new senior woman. Lanham, MD: Rowman and
Littlefield.
Fleming, S. J., & Adolph, R. (1986). Helping bereaved adolescents: Needs and responses.
In C. A. Corr & J. N. McNeil (Eds.), Adolescence and death (pp. 97–118). New York,
NY: Springer Publishing.
Fleming, S. J., & Belanger, S. K. (2001). Trauma, grief, and surviving child sexual abuse.
In R. Neimeyer (Ed.), Meaning reconstruction & the experience of loss (pp. 311–332).
Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Fletcher, J., Mailick, M., Song, J., & Wolfe, B. (2013). A sibling death in the family:
Common and consequential. Demography, 50 (3), 803–826. doi:10.1007/
s13524-012-0162-4

Free download pdf