| Literature DB >> 22754284 |
Abstract
Complicated grief is a recently recognized condition that occurs in about 7% of bereaved people. People with this condition are caught up in rumination about the circumstances of the death, worry about its consequences, or excessive avoidance of reminders of the loss. Unable to comprehend the finality and consequences of the loss, they resort to excessive avoidance of reminders of the loss as they are tossed helplessly on waves of intense emotion. People with complicated grief need help, and clinicians need to know how to recognize the symptoms and how to provide help. This paper provides a framework to help clinicans understand bereavement, grief, and mourning. Evidence-based diagnostic criteria are provided to help clinicians recognize complicated grief, and differentiate it from depression as well as anxiety disorder. We provide an overview of risk factors and basic assumptions and principles that can guide treatment.Entities:
Keywords: bereavement; complicated grief; depression; grief; mourning
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22754284 PMCID: PMC3384440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986
Proposed criteria for complicated grief.[21]
| The person has been bereaved, ie, experienced the death of a loved one, for at least 6 months |
| At least one of the following symptoms of persistent intense acute grief has been present for a period longer than is expected by others in the person's social or cultural environment: |
| -Persistent intense yearning or longing for the person who died |
| -Frequent intense feelings of loneliness or like life is empty or meaningless without the person who died |
| -Recurrent thoughts that it is unfair, meaningless or unbearable to have to live when a loved one has died, or a recurrent urge to die in order to find or to join the deceased |
| -Frequent preoccupying thoughts about the person who died. eg, thoughts or images of the person intrude on usual activities or interfere with functioning |
| At least 2 of the following symptoms are present for at least 1 month: |
| -Frequent troubling rumination about circumstances or consequences of the death, eg, concerns about how or why the person died, or about not being able to manage without their loved one, thoughts of having let the deceased person down, etc |
| -Recurrent feeling of disbelief or inability to accept the death, like the person can't believe or accept that their loved one is really gone |
| -Persistent feeling of being shocked, stunned, dazed, or emotionally numb since the death |
| -Recurrent feelings of anger or bitterness related to the death |
| -Persistent difficulty trusting or caring about other people or feeling intensely envious of others who haven't experienced a similar loss |
| -Frequently experiencing pain or other symptoms that the deceased person had or hearing the voice or seeing the deceased person |
| -Experiencing intense emotional or physiological reactivity to memories of the person who died or to reminders of the loss |
| -Change in behavior due to excessive avoidance or the opposite, excessive proximity seeking, eg, refraining from going places, doing things, or having contact with things that are reminders of the loss, or feeling drawn to reminders of the person, such as wanting to see, touch, hear, or smell things to feel close to the person who died (Note: sometimes people experience both of these seemingly contradictory symptoms.) |
| The duration of symptoms and impairment is at least 1 month |
| The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational or other important areas of functioning, where impairment is not better explained as a culturally appropriate response |
Difference between grief and depression.
| Pervasive loss of interest or pleasure | Loss of interest or pleasure related to missing loved me |
| Pervasive dysphoric mood accross situations | Pangs of emotion triggered by reminders of loss |
| Preoccupation with low self esteem; general sense of guilt or shame | Preoccupation with the deceased; guilt and self blame |
| General withdrawal from activities and people | Avoidance of activities, situations and people because of the death |
| Intrusive images are not prominent | Intrusive images of the deceased are common |
| Yearning and longing not usually seen | Yearning and longing are frequent |