The Impact of Death Education on Fear of Death and Death Anxiety Among Human Services Students.

Irene Searles McClatchey, Steve King
Author Information

Abstract

Human services professionals will undoubtedly work with the dying and bereaved populations at one time or other. Yet, they are poorly prepared to do so since death education, that is, lessons about the human and emotional aspects of death, its implications, and subsequent bereavement issues, is often not part of their curriculum. This nonequivalent comparison group study (N = 86) examined death fear and death anxiety among human services students before and after receiving death education using the Multidimensional Fear of Death Scale. The results showed a statistically significant decrease in death anxiety among the group of students who participated in death education compared to those who did not.

MeSH Term

Adaptation, Psychological
Adult
Anxiety
Attitude to Death
Curriculum
Education, Public Health Professional
Fear
Female
Humans
Male
Students, Public Health
Terminal Care
United States
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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