1. The Moral Status of Animals (Bernard E. Rollin).
2. Pet Animals and Human Well–being (M.W. Fox).
3. Health Consequences of Pet Ownership (Erika Friedmann, Aaron A. Katcher, Sue A. Thomas, James J. Lynch).
4. Nonconventional Human/Companion Animal Bonds (James M. Harris).
5. When Pet Animals Die (Jacob Antelyes).
6. Population Aspects of Animal Mortality (Alan M. Beck).
II: The Grieving Human Companion.
7. Grief at the Loss of a Pet ( Boris M. Levinson).
8. Psychosocial Aspects of bereavement (Herbert A. Nieburg).
9. Relief and Prevention of Grief (Leo K. Bustad, Linda M. Hines).
10. Healing Emotionally Disturbed Children Cope with Loss of a Pet (Mary Link).
11. Development of a Social Work Service to Deal with Grief after Loss of a Pet (Eleanor L. Ryder).
12. Social Work in a Veterinary Hospital: Response to Owner Grief Reactions, (Jamie Quackenbush).
13. Illness and Death of Pets: Role of the Human–Health–Care Team (Michael J. McCulloch).
III: Veterinary Medicine Perspectives.
14. The Human/Animal Bond Revisited (Esther Braun).
15. Clinical Aspects of Grief Associated with Loss of a Pet: A Veterinarian′s View (Marc A. Rosenberg).
16. Role of the Animal Health Technician in Consoling Bereaved Clients (Sally Oblas Walshaw).
17. Owner/Pet Attachment Despite Behavior Problems (Victoria L. Voith).
18. Owner/Pet Pathologic Attachment: The Veterinarian′s Nightmare (E.K. Rynearson).
19. Death of Pets Owned by the Elderly: Implications for Veterinary Practice (George Paulus, John C. Thrush, Cyrus S. Stewart, Patrick Hafner).
20. Psychosocial Model of Veterinary Practice, William H. Sullivan, Carole E. Fudin).
21. Family Psychotherapy Methodology: A Model for Veterinarians and Clinicians (D.T. Wessels Jr.).
22. Epilogue: A Historical Perspective, (Egilde Seravalli).
Contributors.
Index.
Pet Loss and Human Bereavement deals with the human/companion animal relationship and what happens when that bond is broken. The contributors to the book acknowledge the significance o the relationship and the grief involved when a pet dies or is terminally ill. The contributors′ approach covers multidisciplinary care that can be given by veterinarians, psychiatrists, social workers, philosopher–ethicists, and others.
Topics include guidance for dealing with owners of terminally ill or recently deceased animals; the rights of animals to humane treatment; and the right of owners to find acceptance of their bereavement, respect for their emotional ties to their pets, and positive resolution of their grief.