Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Narrative" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Preprocessing narrative texts in electronic medical records to identify hospital adverse events: A scoping review Jafarpour H; Wu G; Cheligeer CK; Yan J; Xu Y; Southern DA; Eastwood CA; Zeng Y; Quan H; 41072367
ENCS
2 The Need for Health Systems to Engage With and Support Youth who are Caregivers-A Lived Experience Perspective From Young Carers Grant A; Goberdhan N; Mar K; Ramkishun A; Rahman S; Redublo T; Caven I; Okrainec K; 41064416
CONCORDIA
3 Approaches to studying emotion using physiological responses to spoken narratives: A scoping review Savard MA; Merlo R; Samithamby A; Paas A; Coffey EBJ; 38961524
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Thinking aloud: effects on text comprehension by children with specific language impairment and their peers McClintock B; Pesco D; Martin-Chang S; 25180778
EDUCATION
5 Deserve's Got Nothin' to Do With It: A Philosopher Visits the NICU David I Waddington 30214922
EDUCATION
6 Experiencing Loss: A Muslim Widow's Bereavement Narrative Kristiansen M; Younis T; Hassani A; Sheikh A; 25958055
SOCANTH
7 Cultural pathways to psychosis care: Patient and caregiver narratives from Puebla, Mexico Sylvanna M Vargas 38470500
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Links Between Adolescents' Moral Mindsets and Narratives of their Inconsistent and Consistent Moral Value Experiences Scirocco A; Recchia H; 36123582
EDUCATION
9 Pantomime (Not Silent Gesture) in Multimodal Communication: Evidence From Children's Narratives. Marentette P, Furman R, Suvanto ME, Nicoladis E 33329222
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Exergaming in Youth and Young Adults: A Narrative Overview O' Loughlin EK; Dutczak H; Kakinami L; Consalvo M; McGrath JJ; Barnett TA; 32017864
PERFORM

 

Title:Experiencing Loss: A Muslim Widow's Bereavement Narrative
Authors:Kristiansen MYounis THassani ASheikh A
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25958055/
DOI:10.1007/s10943-015-0058-x
Publication:Journal of religion and health
Keywords:BereavementGriefIslamNarrativesReligion
PMID:25958055 Category: Date Added:2015-05-11
Dept Affiliation: SOCANTH
1 Department of Health Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences, Qatar University, P.O. Box 2713, Doha, Qatar. makk@sund.ku.dk.
2 Danish Research Centre for Migration, Ethnicity, and Health, and Center for Healthy Aging, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. makk@sund.ku.dk.
3 Department of Psychology, Université du Québec à Montréal, Montreal, Canada.
4 Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Concordia University, Montreal, Canada.
5 Centre for Population Health Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
6 Division of General Internal Medicine and Primary Care, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.

Description:

In this article, we explore how Islam, minority status and refugee experiences intersect in shaping meaning-making processes following bereavement. We do this through a phenomenological analysis of a biographical account of personal loss told by Aisha, a Muslim Palestinian refugee living in Denmark, who narrates her experience of losing her husband to lung cancer. By drawing on a religious framework, Aisha creates meaning from her loss, which enables her to incorporate this loss into her life history and sustain agency. Her narrative invites wider audiences to witness her tale of overcoming loss, thus highlighting the complex way in which religious beliefs, minority status and migration history come together in shaping meaning-making processes, and the importance of reciprocity in narrative studies.





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