1995
DOI: 10.2190/b0jm-78dx-v04l-krxk
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Death Attitudes, Gender and Death Experience: The Nigerian Evidence

Abstract: Death education has just found its way into the Health Education and curriculum of Nigerian universities and so requires some baseline empirical data on students' death attitudes. The sample consisted of 311 students selected from six Nigerian universities that offered Health Education. Three research questions answered with statistical means and two null-hypotheses tested with two-tailed t-test and ANOVA guided the study. The Hoelter multidimensional fear of Death Scale (MFODS) and Templer's Death Anxiety Sca… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Although Atlantic Canada has historical, religious and cultural characteristics relatively unique to the area, the fact that women from this area tend to show higher death fears in certain specific domains makes them similar to women studied in numerous other regions and countries; with findings having been reported in the United States (e.g., Neimeyer & Moore, 1994), Pakistan (e.g., Suhail & Akram, 2002), Kenya (e.g., Okafor, 1994) and…”
Section: Gender and Fear O F Deathmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Although Atlantic Canada has historical, religious and cultural characteristics relatively unique to the area, the fact that women from this area tend to show higher death fears in certain specific domains makes them similar to women studied in numerous other regions and countries; with findings having been reported in the United States (e.g., Neimeyer & Moore, 1994), Pakistan (e.g., Suhail & Akram, 2002), Kenya (e.g., Okafor, 1994) and…”
Section: Gender and Fear O F Deathmentioning
confidence: 89%