An international perspective on bereavement related concepts


Autoria(s): Middleton, Warwick; Moylan, Ann; Raphael, Beverley; Burnett, Paul C.; Martinek, Nada
Data(s)

01/09/1993

Resumo

This paper reports on part of a study which was aimed at assessing the views of leading researchers, theorists or clinicians working in the field of bereavement on key issues including, as reported here, concepts of different forms of grief as well as favoured theoretical orientations. Of a range of conceptual models the most favoured, by a large margin, were attachment theory and the psychodynamic model. The views of the “experts’ were canvassed with respect to the use of seven selected terms used to denote some variant of the grieving process. There was, on the part of the respondents, reasonable support for the syndromes of “delayed’, “chronic’, “anticipatory’ and “absent’ grief. “Inhibited’ and “unresolved’ grief tended to be described using one of the four terms already supported, while the use of the term “distorted grief’ attracted little support.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/27917/

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

DOI:10.3109/00048679309075803

Middleton, Warwick, Moylan, Ann, Raphael, Beverley, Burnett, Paul C., & Martinek, Nada (1993) An international perspective on bereavement related concepts. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 27(3), pp. 457-463.

Direitos

Copyright 1993 Taylor & Francis

Fonte

Division of Research and Commercialisation

Palavras-Chave #170100 PSYCHOLOGY #Bereavement #Forms of Grief #Theoretical Orientations #Professional Views
Tipo

Journal Article