
Study
confirms normal patterns of grief, highlights
yearning
Newswise — “Is my grief normal?” That is one of the
most common questions posed by people who have
lost a loved one. A new study by Dana-Farber
researchers has helped answer that question by
affirming the commonly accepted stages of grief –
disbelief, yearning, anger, depression, and
acceptance – and the sequence in which these
emotions occur. The findings will appear in the Feb.
21 issue of the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA).
While offering insights into
how individuals normally adjust to a loved one’s
natural death, the study also challenges existing
clinical guidelines by underscoring that yearning,
not depression, was the most common reaction
experienced by survivors.
“This study confirms what
people have suspected, but, equally important, the
data provide a benchmark for how grief changes over
time.” says senior author Holly Prigerson, PhD,
director of Dana-Farber’s Center for Psycho-Oncology
and Palliative Care Research.
Based on the three-year Yale
Bereavement Study, the grief investigation involved
interviews with 233 individuals in Connecticut who
had suffered a loss from a natural death (such as
cancer or heart disease), rather than trauma (such
as a car accident or suicide). Each participant was
interviewed three times over two years, most often
at home; data were collected between January 2000
and January 2003.
The study found that counter to
clinical literature and popular understanding,
yearning, rather than depression, was the most
common emotion felt by study participants after a
loved one’s natural death. “Up to now, people
thought sadness was the most characteristic feature
of bereavement, but these data show it is more about
yearning and pining and missing the person – a
hunger for having them come back,” says Prigerson, a
bereavement expert.
On average, the interviewees’
negative symptoms (disbelief, yearning, anger, and
depression) had peaked by six months after the loss
and were on the decline. People who face heightened
distress beyond six months, the researchers note,
may be at risk for a condition called “prolonged
grief disorder” and should be evaluated by a mental
health professional.
Study leaders say their
findings suggest the need for revising the
bereavement section of the psychiatric guidelines,
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, Fourth Edition.
Data confirmed the “stage
theory” of grief described by Drs. John Bowlby and
Colin Parkes, popularized by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross,
MD, in the 1960s, and now widely accepted by
clinicians and the general public. The current study
showed that disbelief was highest initially,
yearning for the deceased peaked at four months
post-loss, anger at five months post-loss, and
depression at six months post-loss. Acceptance of
the person’s death was high and grew over the
two-year study period.
Although Prigerson cautions
that not everyone goes through the exact sequence of
grief, she writes in JAMA that “the results provide
an evidence base from which to educate clinicians
(e.g., primary and palliative care physicians,
geriatricians, psychiatrists, oncologists, related
hospital and hospice staff, bereavement counselors)
and lay persons (e.g., patients, family members,
friends) about what to expect following the death of
a family member or loved one.”
A related finding was that
advance knowledge about a person’s prognosis and
pending death can have beneficial effects. “When
patients and families knew about the terminal
diagnosis ahead of time, specifically six months or
longer,” they were better prepared for the death and
had more acceptance and less disbelief afterwards,”
says Prigerson, who is also an associate professor
of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.
Study team members included
Prigerson and Susan Block, MD, both of Dana-Farber
and Brigham and Women’s Hospital; Baohui Zhang, a
statistician at Dana-Farber; and Paul Maciejewski,
PhD, of Yale University School of Medicine.
The research was funded in part
by grants from the National Institute of Mental
Health, the National Cancer Institute and the
National Institute for Neurological Disorders and
Stroke.
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (http://www.dana-farber.org)
is a principal teach affiliate of the Harvard
Medical School and is among the leading cancer
research and care centers in the United States. It
is a founding member of the Dana-Farber/Harvard
Cancer Center (DF/HCC), designated a comprehensive
cancer center by the National Cancer Institute.