1.Virtual mourning: How Filipinos utilize facebook to express grief and seek support – A hermeneutic phenomenological study
Marc Kenneth F. Cabañ ; ero ; Ma. Teresa Tricia Guison-Bautista
The Filipino Family Physician 2025;63(2):254-268
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES
This study examines how grieving Filipinos use Facebook to cope and find support. It investigates the combination of traditional mourning practices and the influence of social media. By exploring this intersection, the study fills an essential gap in the existing literature on digital mourning within Filipino culture. Understanding these digital bereavement practices can inform palliative care interventions, particularly in providing psychosocial support to grieving families.
METHODSThe study used a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, conducting in-depth interviews with ten bereaved Filipinos selected by specific criteria. Data were gathered through video calls and in-person interviews to explore their experiences, and the qualitative data was thematically analyzed for key insights.
RESULTSThe analysis revealed three key themes: (1) blending mourning traditions with Facebook for emotional support; (2) Facebook interactions that provide relief and validation in grief; and (3) digital mourning experiences that foster healing. Social media enhances grieving practices for Filipinos, allowing them to honor loved ones and strengthen community connections.
RECOMMENDATIONSThe study stresses the need for culturally sensitive digital spaces and grief support services that combine online and offline mourning practices. It calls on healthcare providers and grief counselors to incorporate digital mourning and highlights the need for further research on grief expressions on social media.
Human ; Bereavement ; Social Media
2.Evaluation of corneal parameter changes under different accommodative stimuli with Scheimpflug imaging-based tomography
J Bedrán-García FARID ; P Pi& ; #xF1 ; ero DAVID
International Eye Science 2024;24(9):1357-1366
AIM: To evaluate the reliability of measurements of corneal changes with accommodation in healthy eyes using a Scheimpflug imaging-based system and how these measurements distribute in the normal population.METHODS: Prospective, non-randomized, comparative study including 27 healthy subjects(54 eyes), including emmetropia(13 eyes), myopia(17 eyes), hyperopia(4 eyes)and astigmatism(20 eyes)groups. In all cases, a complete eye examination was performed, including the analysis of corneal changes with different accommodative stimuli(+2.00, 0.00 and -3.00 D)using the Pentacam AXL system. The investigation was structured in 2 phases: repeatability analysis and characterization of accommodation-related corneal changes in healthy populations.RESULTS: In the repeatability analysis, the index of height asymmetry(IHA)showed the greatest variability with the three accommodative stimuli, being the results for the rest of parameters acceptable. The group of emmetropes showed significant differences with accommodative changes in the position of maximum keratometry(Kmax; P<0.05), whereas in the astigmatism group, significant changes were not only observed in the position of Kmax, but also in minimum corneal thickness(MCT), corneal spherical aberration, and total and low order aberration root mean square(all P<0.05). Likewise, a significant difference was found in the displacement of the X position of Kmax with +2.00 D and -3.00 D in the myopia group(P=0.033)as well as in changes with +2.00 D and -3.00 D in the magnitude of the position vector of Kmax in the emmetropia group(P<0.05). No significant changes were found between accommodative stimuli in the displacement of coordinates of MCT(P≥0.109).CONCLUSION: The position of Kmax and MCT in healthy corneas can change significantly when presenting different accommodative stimuli using the accommodation mode of the Pentacam system, with different trends in these accommodation-related corneal changes between refractive errors. Likewise, the consistency of the measurements obtained with Scheimpflug has been confirmed.


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