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Published byOctavia Lester Modified over 9 years ago
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CHAPTER TWELVE: PERSONAL LOSS: BEREAVEMENT AND GRIEF
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Terms Critical to Understanding Loss Bereavement (sorrow) Uncomplicated bereavement Grief (mental anguish) Complicated grief/prolonged grief Traumatic grief Disenfranchised grief (a loss that one is unable to share) Loss Primary loss (death) Secondary loss (resulting from the death) Ambiguous loss (physically or psychologically missing) Mourning (social or cultural state or condition expressing grief)
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Dynamics of Bereavement Cultural Dynamics Culture 3 patterns of response: Death accepting Death defying (dreading/avoiding) Death denying Sociocultural Mores Spirituality and Religion
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Conceptual Approaches to Bereavement Stage/Phase Models Kubler-Ross’s Stages (denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance)
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Assessment Tools Texas Revised Inventory of Grief (TRIG) Current Grief Past Disruption Grief Experience Inventory (GEI) Nine clinical scales Hogan Grief Reaction Checklist (HGRC) Can discriminate variability in the grieving process as a function of cause of death and time elapsed since death Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG) Targets symptoms of grief that are distinct from bereavement-related depression and anxiety, and predicts long-term functional impairments
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Types of Loss Death of a Spouse One of the most emotionally stressful and disruptive events in life More widows than widowers Loss Due to Caregiving Death of a Child Perhaps the ultimate loss for a person to endure regardless of the age of the child
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Types of Loss Cont. Bereavement in Childhood (age related) Bereavement in Adolescence Value of connectedness Bereavement in the Elderly Present more somatic problems than psychological problems No indication that the intensity of grief varies significantly with age Grief among older people may be more prolonged than among younger people Tend to be lonelier and to have far longer periods of loneliness than younger people
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Types of Loss Cont. HIV/AIDS (anticipatory, complex, page 430) Job Loss Separation and Divorce Death of a Pet Complicated Grief Traumatic grief
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Being There for Grievers Empathic Presence Gentle Conversation Providing Available Space Eliciting Trust
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The Crisis Worker's Own Grief Emotional investment in the client Bereavement overload Countertransference Emotional replenishment Facing one’s own mortality Sense of power Tendency to rescue
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