2013
DOI: 10.1080/07481187.2013.788584
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Parental Grief and Memento Mori Photography: Narrative, Meaning, Culture, and Context

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Cited by 48 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 60 publications
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“…Researchers and parents agree that perinatal bereavement interventions should validate the baby’s worth and existence, support parents’ expression of grief and mourning, assist in meaning-making, and improve parents’ ability to cope with the death (Murray et al 2000 ; Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ; Wheeler 2001 ; Capitulo 2005 ). Research has elucidated the value of bereavement photographs for these tasks (Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ; Capitulo 2005 ; Riches and Dawson 1998 ), yet often in perinatal death the only opportunities to capture the baby’s visage occur postmortem. A vast majority of U.S. and European parents participating in research report gratitude for postmortem photographs of their newborn; conversely most express regret if they do not have such photos (Gold et al 2007 ; Harvey et al 2008 ; Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Researchers and parents agree that perinatal bereavement interventions should validate the baby’s worth and existence, support parents’ expression of grief and mourning, assist in meaning-making, and improve parents’ ability to cope with the death (Murray et al 2000 ; Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ; Wheeler 2001 ; Capitulo 2005 ). Research has elucidated the value of bereavement photographs for these tasks (Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ; Capitulo 2005 ; Riches and Dawson 1998 ), yet often in perinatal death the only opportunities to capture the baby’s visage occur postmortem. A vast majority of U.S. and European parents participating in research report gratitude for postmortem photographs of their newborn; conversely most express regret if they do not have such photos (Gold et al 2007 ; Harvey et al 2008 ; Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research has elucidated the value of bereavement photographs for these tasks (Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ; Capitulo 2005 ; Riches and Dawson 1998 ), yet often in perinatal death the only opportunities to capture the baby’s visage occur postmortem. A vast majority of U.S. and European parents participating in research report gratitude for postmortem photographs of their newborn; conversely most express regret if they do not have such photos (Gold et al 2007 ; Harvey et al 2008 ; Blood and Cacciatore 2014 ). Two studies have identified postmortem bereavement photography as “one of the most helpful services” during the crisis of a newborn’s death [(Gold et al 2007 ), p. 1160].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a survey by Foster, Dietrich, Friedman, Gordon and Gilmer (2012) demonstrated that 97% of paediatric hospitals in the United States offer memento making, with handprints, locks of hair and memory boxes being the most popular methods, the use of mementos in paediatric bereavement care has received little focus in the recent literature. Commonplace in perinatal death and bereavement care, staff often use memento making to help affirm an infant's existence and create lasting memories for the parents (Alexander, 2001;Blood & Cacciatore, 2014;Cacciatore, Erlandsson, & Rådestad, 2013;Tan, Docherty, Barfield, & Brandon, 2012). However, this concept does not appear prominent in the paediatric literature, especially for older children, where staff may wrongly assume that parents already have many physical reminders of the child and do not want hospital mementos.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Blood y Cacciatore 19 comentan que la utilización de la fotografía postmortem tiene un gran valor; perder la oportunidad de tomar una fotografía en el momento de crisis podría ser irremediable y una fuente de arrepentimiento. Estos mismos autores en otro artículo, concluyeron que entre más joven sea el infante, más dados van a estar los padres a esta práctica 23 .…”
Section: Prácticas De Soporteunclassified