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Edith Maria Steffen
Edith Maria Steffen
Associate Professor in Counselling Psychology, University of Plymouth
Dirección de correo verificada de plymouth.ac.uk - Página principal
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Citado por
Citado por
Año
Continuing Bonds in Bereavement: New Directions for Research and Practice
D Klass, EM Steffen
New York: Routledge, 2017
285*2017
Sense of presence experiences and meaning-making in bereavement: A qualitative analysis
E Steffen, A Coyle
Death Studies 35 (7), 579-609, 2011
1732011
Can “sense of presence” experiences in bereavement be conceptualised as spiritual phenomena?
E Steffen, A Coyle
Mental Health, Religion & Culture 13 (3), 273-291, 2010
1122010
‘Sense of presence’experiences in bereavement and their relationship to mental health: A critical examination of a continuing controversy
E Steffen, A Coyle
Mental health and anomalous experience, 33-56, 2012
632012
Sensory and quasi-sensory experiences of the deceased in bereavement: An interdisciplinary and integrative review
KS Kamp, EM Steffen, B Alderson-Day, P Allen, A Austad, J Hayes, ...
Schizophrenia bulletin 46 (6), 1367-1381, 2020
572020
Ethical considerations in qualitative research
E Steffen
Analysing qualitative data in psychology 2, 31-44, 2016
502016
“I thought they should know… that daddy is not completely gone” A Case Study of Sense-of-Presence Experiences in Bereavement and Family Meaning-Making
E Steffen, A Coyle
OMEGA-Journal of Death and Dying 74 (4), 363-385, 2017
442017
Working with welcome and unwelcome presence in grief
J Hayes, EM Steffen
Continuing bonds in bereavement, 163-175, 2017
302017
Introduction: Continuing bonds—20 years on
D Klass, EM Steffen
Continuing Bonds in Bereavement, 1-14, 2017
242017
A qualitative analysis of psychosocial needs and support impacts in families affected by young sudden cardiac death: The role of community and peer support
EM Steffen, L Timotijevic, A Coyle
European journal of cardiovascular nursing 19 (8), 681-690, 2020
182020
From shared roots to fruitful collaboration: How counselling psychology can benefit from (re) connecting with positive psychology
E Steffen, A Vossler, J Stephen
Counselling Psychology Review 30 (3), 1-11, 2015
172015
The power of counselling psychology in an age of powerlessness: A call to action
E Steffen, T Hanley
Counselling Psychology Review 28 (2), 3-7, 2013
162013
Affirming the positive in anomalous experiences: A challenge to dominant accounts of reality, life, and death
EM Steffen, DJ Wilde, CE Cooper
The Routledge International Handbook of Critical Positive Psychology, 2017
152017
Both ‘being with’and ‘doing to’: Borderline personality disorder and the integration of humanistic values in contemporary therapy practice
E Steffen
Counselling Psychology Review 28 (1), 64-71, 2013
142013
Culture, contexts and connections: a conversation with Dennis Klass about his life and work as a bereavement scholar
EM Steffen, D Klass
Mortality 23 (3), 203-214, 2018
112018
The relationship between counseling psychology and positive psychology
A Vossler, E Steffen, S Joseph
Positive Psychology in Practice: Promoting Human Flourishing in Work, Health …, 2015
112015
Implicational meaning (re)creation in bereavement as a lifeworld dialogue: An existential-constructivist perspective
EM Steffen
Journal of Constructivist Psychology, 2018
10*2018
Sensory experiences of one’s deceased spouse in older adults: An analysis of predisposing factors
KS Kamp, EM Steffen, A Moskowitz, H Spindler
Aging & mental health 26 (1), 140-148, 2022
92022
Ancient Mesopotamian remembrance and the family dead
R MacDougal
Continuing Bonds in Bereavement, 262-275, 2017
92017
A moment to pause and reflect on the significance of the existential paradigm for counselling psychology
E Steffen, T Hanley
Counselling Psychology Review 29 (2), 2-6, 2013
92013
El sistema no puede realizar la operación en estos momentos. Inténtalo de nuevo más tarde.
Artículos 1–20