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Personal Support

Grief support, end-of-life care, life transitions and family caregiver support.

4 Articles
Supporting Caregivers: Preventing Burnout
CaregiversMental HealthNatural Approaches

Supporting Caregivers: Preventing Burnout

In France, 11 million people daily support a dependent loved one — an elderly parent, a child with disabilities, a spouse with chronic illness. These family caregivers, often invisible, bear considerable physical, emotional, and administrative burden that exposes them to burnout, depression, and health problems. Recognizing, supporting, and accompanying them through therapeutic and natural approaches is a major public health challenge.

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Supporting Grief: Natural and Therapeutic Approaches
GriefMental HealthNatural Approaches

Supporting Grief: Natural and Therapeutic Approaches

Grief is a universal yet profoundly singular experience. Losing a loved one disrupts physical, emotional, and existential balance. While grief is not an illness, it can become pathological when prolonged or complicated. Therapeutic support — psychotherapy, support groups — and natural approaches — herbal medicine, sophrology, art therapy, meditation — support the grieving process by offering spaces for expression and emotional regulation tools.

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Comfort Care and End-of-Life Support
End of LifeNatural ApproachesSophrology

Comfort Care and End-of-Life Support

End-of-life support extends well beyond the medical framework of palliative care. Complementary approaches — aromatherapy, therapeutic touch, music therapy, sophrology, reflexology — provide precious physical and emotional relief where curative treatments have reached their limits. They restore dignity, comfort, and human connection in life's final moments. Their integration into palliative care units is growing, supported by scientific evidence and demand from patients and families.

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Supporting Life Transitions
Life TransitionsMental HealthNatural Approaches

Supporting Life Transitions

Life transitions — relocation, career change, divorce, retirement, empty nest, illness, immigration — are periods of vulnerability and transformation that mobilize all personal resources. Neither truly ill nor quite well, the person in transition navigates an uncomfortable in-between where the old identity dissolves and the new one has not yet emerged. Therapeutic support and natural approaches offer precious help for navigating these passages with awareness and resilience.

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