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Predictors of grief following the death of one's child: the contribution of finding meaning

โœ Scribed by Nancy J. Keesee; Joseph M. Currier; Robert A. Neimeyer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
167 KB
Volume
64
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9762

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

This study examined the relative contribution of objective risk factors and meaningโ€making to grief severity among 157 parents who had lost a child to death. Participants completed the Core Bereavement Items (CBI; Burnett, Middleton, Raphael, & Martinek, 1997), Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG; Prigerson et al., 1995), questions assessing the process and degree of senseโ€making and benefitโ€finding, and the circumstances surrounding their losses. Results showed that the violence of the death, age of the child at death, and length of bereavement accounted for significant differences in normative grief symptoms (assessed by the CBI). Other results indicated that the cause of death was the only objective risk factor that significantly predicted the intensity of complicated grief (assessed by the ICG). Of the factors examined in this study, senseโ€making emerged as the most salient predictor of grief severity, with parents who reported having made little to no sense of their child's death being more likely to report greater intensity of grief. Implications for clinical work are discussed. ยฉ 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol 64:1โ€“19, 2008.


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Sense and significance: a mixed methods
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## Abstract The purpose of this mixed methods study was to identify specific themes of meaning making (sense making and benefit finding) among bereaved parents, as well as to examine associations of these themes to the severity of grief symptomatology. A sample of 156 bereaved parents responded in