The 2 stages of sleep
Nonrapid eye movement (NREM) and Rapid Eye Movement (REM)
This term is often defined as an awareness of one's inner self and a sense of connection to a higher being, nature, or some purpose greater than oneself.
Spirtuality
This type of loss involves life changes that are normal, expected, and often positive.
Necessary loss
The three functions of sleep.
Restoration, memory consolidation, and preparation for the next wake cycle.
Factors influencing spirituality.
Acute illness, chronic illness, terminal illness, and near-death experience
This term is used to describe a normal but bewildering cluster of ordinary human emotions arising in response to a significant loss, intensified, and complicated by the relationship to the person or the object lost.
Grief
The effects of sleep deprivation cause these three alterations.
Immune function, metabolism, and nitrogen/protein functions.
This term describes a disruption in the life principle that pervades a person's entire being and transcends the person's biologic and psychosocial nature.
Spiritual distress
These 7 factors influences loss and grief.
Human development, personal relationships, nature of the loss, coping strategies, culture, and spiritual and religious beliefs.
Prolonged sleep loss alters these various body functions.
Mood, motor performance, and memory, equilibrium.
This view enables you to establish a helping role and a healing relationship.
Holistic view
This type of care focuses on the prevention, relief, reduction, or soothing of symptoms of disease or disorders throughout the entire course of an illness.
Palliative care
These 7 factors influence sleep.
Drugs and substances, lifestyle, usual sleep patterns, emotional stress, environment, exercise and fatigue, food and caloric intake.
The FICA assessment tool stands for this criteria.
Faith
Importance
Community
Address (interventions to address)
According to Kubler-Ross's Grief model, this stage involves realization of the full impact of the loss.
Depression