Rachel Pazder’s research while affiliated with The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and other places

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Publications (2)


Table 1 : Pharmacotherapy Interventions
Table 2 : Support/Counselling Interventions
Table 3 : Psychotherapy Interventions
Table 4 : Systems-Oriented Interventions
Bereavement care interventions: A systematic review
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2004

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1,301 Reads

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165 Citations

BMC Palliative Care

Amanda L Forte

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Rachel Pazder

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Chris Feudtner

Background Despite abundant bereavement care options, consensus is lacking regarding optimal care for bereaved persons. Methods We conducted a systematic review, searching MEDLINE, PsychINFO, CINAHL, EBMR, and other databases using the terms (bereaved or bereavement) and (grief) combined with (intervention or support or counselling or therapy) and (controlled or trial or design). We also searched citations in published reports for additional pertinent studies. Eligible studies had to evaluate whether the treatment of bereaved individuals reduced bereavement-related symptoms. Data from the studies was abstracted independently by two reviewers. Results 74 eligible studies evaluated diverse treatments designed to ameliorate a variety of outcomes associated with bereavement. Among studies utilizing a structured therapeutic relationship, eight featured pharmacotherapy (4 included an untreated control group), 39 featured support groups or counselling (23 included a control group), and 25 studies featured cognitive-behavioural, psychodynamic, psychoanalytical, or interpersonal therapies (17 included a control group). Seven studies employed systems-oriented interventions (all had control groups). Other than efficacy for pharmacological treatment of bereavement-related depression, we could identify no consistent pattern of treatment benefit among the other forms of interventions. Conclusions Due to a paucity of reports on controlled clinical trails, no rigorous evidence-based recommendation regarding the treatment of bereaved persons is currently possible except for the pharmacologic treatment of depression. We postulate the following five factors as impeding scientific progress regarding bereavement care interventions: 1) excessive theoretical heterogeneity, 2) stultifying between-study variation, 3) inadequate reporting of intervention procedures, 4) few published replication studies, and 5) methodological flaws of study design.

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Citations (1)


... Given the lack of methodologically reliable research studies showing the efficacy of interventions, the recommendation is that, in uncomplicated grief, the professionals' role should be to provide information and activate the available resources, without implementing a formal or structured approach [5]. Preventive interventions seem not to be effective, but follow-up ones do, as they can reduce complicated grief symptoms [6]. ...

Reference:

Nursing Interventions in Primary Care for the Management of Maladaptive Grief: A Scoping Review
Bereavement care interventions: A systematic review

BMC Palliative Care