![]() |
Learn more about our Mental Health First Aid Courses |
CE Course: Children’s Grief and Its Impact | Pediatric Palliative Care
February 20 @ 8:30 am – 11:45 am
This 3-hour training provides an overview of how children understand, experience, and express grief across developmental stages. Participants will explore emotional and behavioral responses to loss, the influence of family and cultural context, and the impact of trauma on the grieving process. Through brief case examples and interactive discussion, attendees will learn practical, age-appropriate strategies to support grieving children—whether in schools, homes, or clinical settings. The session also includes key concepts in pediatric palliative care to help professionals prepare families for end-of-life experiences, anticipatory grief, and early bereavement.
Learning Objectives
Children’s Grief Objectives:
- Recognize Developmental Differences
Identify how grief presents in children from early childhood through adolescence. - Identify Emotional & Behavioral Responses
Understand common grief reactions—such as sadness, anger, regression, guilt, or withdrawal. - Understand Attachment & Environmental Influences
Describe how family dynamics, attachment, culture, and environment shape a child’s grieving process. - Address Trauma-Related Grief
Recognize when grief is complicated by trauma (e.g., sudden or violent loss). - Use Practical Support Strategies
Apply communication techniques, play-based tools, and coping exercises to support grieving children. - Create Age-Appropriate Interventions
Tailor grief activities and conversations to a child’s developmental level. - Identify Complicated Grief
Recognize when a child may need additional intervention or referral. - Collaborate with Caregivers
Support families in creating consistent, compassionate environments for grieving children. - Promote Long-Term Well-Being
Understand long-term impacts of unaddressed grief and reinforce protective factors and resilience.
Palliative Care-Focused Objectives:
- Explain the Role of Pediatric Palliative Care
Understand goals of comfort, dignity, and emotional support during serious illness and end of life. - Describe Children’s Understanding of Illness & Death
Recognize how developmental stages influence questions, fears, and meaning-making. - Use Compassionate Communication
Support age-appropriate conversations about illness, dying, and fears. - Support Anticipatory Grief
Identify signs of anticipatory grief and offer simple, supportive interventions. - Facilitate Family-Centered Decision-Making
Approach families respectfully and sensitively during difficult choices. - Develop Comfort-Focused Coping Tools
Provide children with strategies to manage emotions, fears, and uncertainty. - Incorporate Legacy Building
Use memory-making and meaning-centered activities to support connection and closure. - Recognize Impact on Siblings & Peers
Identify and respond to the needs of siblings and peers also affected. - Collaborate with Interdisciplinary Teams
Understand how coordinated care among professionals enhances support. - Promote Post-Loss Continuity of Care
Support families in early bereavement and connect them to ongoing resources.
Featuring: Full Bio information Coming Soon!
Karleena Calimer, LMSW-C | Stephanie Nalley, Grief Specialist, Completing Masters
With gratitude, Brook Lane acknowledges this program is funded in part by the William B. and Sylvia A. Hunsberger Fund. Thank you.


