AIDS and the New Orphans: Coping with Death
By (Author) Barbara O. Dane
By (author) Carol Levine
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st October 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
362.19697920083
Paperback
168
By the year 2000, as many as 125,000 children under the age of 18 in the U.S. will have been orphaned by AIDS. Social services in major urban centers such as New York, Miami, Los Angeles, and Washington will be further overwhelmed by these new clients and their unique problems. In this book, experts on AIDS, bereavement, and children draw together and analyze research and practice models that may be vital to individual and public policy solutions. The first chapter sets the stage by examining how Western culture approaches death. Issues of spirituality and children are discussed next, and the following chapters deal with childhood bereavement among latency-age children and adolescents. The role of culture and ethnicity are examined in the Latino and Black communities. Also, the conflicts and problems that new guardians face as they attempt to build new and secure relationships with grieving youngsters are addressed. The book ends with an examination of four projects that are reaching children and families and gives recommendations to practitioners. This book is an invaluable examination of a problem of growing social concern for social, medical, and mental health professionals, public policy analysts, and the general public.
.,."a good introduction to the topic of grieving HIV affected children and adolescents...a great source for educators and trainers who wish to introduce human service students and volunteers to this topic....The editors should be commended for their ongoing crusade to bring HIV-affected children to the attention of service providers and policymaker."-Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal.
...a good introduction to the topic of grieving HIV affected children and adolescents...a great source for educators and trainers who wish to introduce human service students and volunteers to this topic....The editors should be commended for their ongoing crusade to bring HIV-affected children to the attention of service providers and policymaker.-Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal.
As timely as today's newspaper, ....this publication is a landmark contribution to the literature of the AIDS epidemic and will be of particular interest to mental health specialists, advocates, policymakers, and planners and all who work in health care. Families of AIDS orphans, too, should have this information. This book...sensitizes us to the challenges of these needy children and families, and they open the door to policies and programs that might mitigate the full force of these tragedies. In the midst of the feeding frenzy of public funding budget cuts in social spending, the cries of these orphaned children must be heard. Their needs become a prism through which our society's response to the vulnerability of all children can be judged.-JAMA
..."a good introduction to the topic of grieving HIV affected children and adolescents...a great source for educators and trainers who wish to introduce human service students and volunteers to this topic....The editors should be commended for their ongoing crusade to bring HIV-affected children to the attention of service providers and policymaker."-Child and Adolescent Social Work Journal.
"As timely as today's newspaper, ....this publication is a landmark contribution to the literature of the AIDS epidemic and will be of particular interest to mental health specialists, advocates, policymakers, and planners and all who work in health care. Families of AIDS orphans, too, should have this information. This book...sensitizes us to the challenges of these needy children and families, and they open the door to policies and programs that might mitigate the full force of these tragedies. In the midst of the feeding frenzy of public funding budget cuts in social spending, the cries of these orphaned children must be heard. Their needs become a prism through which our society's response to the vulnerability of all children can be judged."-JAMA
BARBARA O. DANE is Associate Professor at the New York University School of Social Work and engages in private practice with individuals, families, and groups. A frequent lecturer on AIDS and bereavement, she has authored several articles and book chapters and is co-author of AIDS: Intervening with Hidden Grievers. CAROL LEVINE is Executive Director of the Orphan Project: Families and Children in the HIV Epidemic. She has authored numerous articles and chapters on AIDS and bioethics, and is editor of A Death in the Family: Orphans of the HIV Epidemic. She was named a MacArthur fellow in 1993.