(HealthDay News) -- Death may be difficult to comprehend at any
age, but it can be particularly confusing and scary to young
children.
The U.S. National Library of Medicine offers these suggestions
when talking to children about death:
- Keep your explanation honest, simple, and on a level that's
appropriate for the child's age.
- Understand that death can cause fears and confusion in many
children.
- Talk about it as openly as possible when they ask questions or
if a situation occurs that requires you to discuss it.
- Talk about your feelings -- fear, sadness, anger and anything
else you feel. Show your child that the emotions they have are
normal.
- Help children understand that they had nothing to do with the
death. The person did not die because of something the children
did, and they could not have prevented it from happening.
2008
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