Coping with loss can be a very difficult journey. ADEC has compiled these resources for individuals who are looking for help or who wish to offer support to another who is coping with a loss.
The articles below have been drawn from The Forum, ADEC's member newsletter, because of their relevancy and appropriateness for the nonprofessional. (These articles may not be reprinted without the express written consent of ADEC. Contact adec@adec.org to request reprints.)
Other resources include links to Web sites presented by other organizations that may be useful. (Note about links.) YouTube videos appear courtesy of the Open to Hope Foundation. See more videos at their YouTube channel.
End-of-Life Issues ADEC defines end-of-life decision-making as the aspects of life-threatening illness/terminal illness that involve choices and decisions about actions to be taken for individuals, families and professional caregivers.*
These decisions may be related to medical, ethical, legal, social and family issues and may be influenced by culture and socialization, religion and spirituality, historical and contemporary perspectives, lifespan and larger systems issues.
*This definition is taken directly from the Handbook of Thanatology Introduction to Part 2, which is dedicated to EOL decision-making and edited for public consumption.
**Note: The Association for Death Education and Counseling is not responsible for the availability or content of the sites it links to, nor does the ADEC endorse, warrant or guarantee the products, services or information described or offered at these other Internet sites. Users cannot assume that the external sites will abide by reasonable privacy practices.