AIM: The aim of this study was to report on an analysis of the concept of pre-death grief in the context of dementia family caregiving. BACKGROUND: Research indicates that witnessing changes and losses in a family member with dementia can lead to pre-death grief. Pre-death grief is associated with depression, burden and maladaptive caregiver coping. However, the concept lacks a refined definition and blurs with similar constructs. DESIGN: Concept analysis using a hybrid of Penrod and Hupcey's principle-based concept analysis and Chin and Kramer's conceptualization of meaning. DATA SOURCES: 49 peer-reviewed papers (2000-2013) that addressed pre-death grief in dementia family caregivers were used for the principle-based analysis; two examples from the popular media were used for the analysis of conceptual meaning. METHODS: The scientific papers were examined for epistemological, linguistic, pragmatic and logical clarity. The two examples from the popular media were explored for conceptual meaning. RESULTS: Pre-death grief in the context of dementia caregiving is a meaningful concept found in the popular media. From a scholarly point of view, it is an emerging concept. A definition is offered to advance conceptual clarity. Discussion focuses on advancing the concept into a situation-specific middle-range theory of pre-death grief in family caregiving. CONCLUSIONS: The concept of pre-death grief has salience for researchers and caregivers. This analysis lays the foundation for use of the concept in nursing research and practice across cultural, environmental and illness domains.
AIM: The aim of this study was to report on an analysis of the concept of pre-death grief in the context of dementia family caregiving. BACKGROUND: Research indicates that witnessing changes and losses in a family member with dementia can lead to pre-death grief. Pre-death grief is associated with depression, burden and maladaptive caregiver coping. However, the concept lacks a refined definition and blurs with similar constructs. DESIGN: Concept analysis using a hybrid of Penrod and Hupcey's principle-based concept analysis and Chin and Kramer's conceptualization of meaning. DATA SOURCES: 49 peer-reviewed papers (2000-2013) that addressed pre-death grief in dementia family caregivers were used for the principle-based analysis; two examples from the popular media were used for the analysis of conceptual meaning. METHODS: The scientific papers were examined for epistemological, linguistic, pragmatic and logical clarity. The two examples from the popular media were explored for conceptual meaning. RESULTS: Pre-death grief in the context of dementia caregiving is a meaningful concept found in the popular media. From a scholarly point of view, it is an emerging concept. A definition is offered to advance conceptual clarity. Discussion focuses on advancing the concept into a situation-specific middle-range theory of pre-death grief in family caregiving. CONCLUSIONS: The concept of pre-death grief has salience for researchers and caregivers. This analysis lays the foundation for use of the concept in nursing research and practice across cultural, environmental and illness domains.
Authors: Allison Lindauer; Glenise McKenzie; David LaFazia; Loriann McNeill; Kate Mincks; Natasha Spoden; Marcella Myers; Nora Mattek; Linda L Teri Journal: J Med Internet Res Date: 2019-05-24 Impact factor: 5.428
Authors: Kirsten J Moore; Sophie Crawley; Victoria Vickerstaff; Claudia Cooper; Michael King; Elizabeth L Sampson Journal: Int Psychogeriatr Date: 2020-04-03 Impact factor: 3.878
Authors: Tau Ming Liew; Philip Yap; Nan Luo; Soo Boon Hia; Gerald Choon-Huat Koh; Bee Choo Tai Journal: BMC Geriatr Date: 2018-05-11 Impact factor: 3.921