Answers.
Actual Loss - Correct Answer loss that can be recognized by others
Perceived loss - Correct Answer loss felt by person but intangible to others (loss of
youth, financial independence, etc)
Physical Loss - Correct Answer loss of life, limb, an object, person, pet, or job
Psychological loss - Correct Answer loss that affects a person's self-image
Maturational loss - Correct Answer experienced as a result of natural developmental
process
Situational loss - Correct Answer experienced as a result of an unpredictable event
Anticipatory loss - Correct Answer loss has not yet taken place
Grief - Correct Answer Internal emotional reaction to a loss
Bereavement - Correct Answer state of sorrow over the death or departure of a loved
one
Mourning - Correct Answer the act of showing sorrow or grief
Engel's Six Stages of Grief - Correct Answer 1. Shock and disbelief
2. Developing awareness
3. Restitution
4. Resolving the loss
5. Idealization
6. Outcome
Uniform Definition of Death Act - Correct Answer An individual who has sustained
either (1) irreversible cessation of all functions of circulatory and respiratory functions or
(2) irreversible cessation of all functions of the entire brain, including the brainstem, is
dead.
Medical criteria to certify death - Correct Answer -Cessation of breathing
-No response to deep painful stimuli
-Lack of reflexes and spontaneous movement
Components of a "Good Death" - Correct Answer 1. Control of symptoms