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The time course of grief reactions to spousal loss: evidence from a national probability sample

The time course of grief reactions to spousal loss: evidence from a national probability sample
The time course of grief reactions to spousal loss: evidence from a national probability sample
Most studies of widowhood have focused on reactions during the first few years postloss. The authors investigated whether widowhood had more enduring effects using a nationally representative U.S. sample. Participants were 768 individuals who had lost their spouse (from a few months to 64 years) prior to data collection. Results indicated that the widowed continued to talk, think, and feel emotions about their lost spouse decades later. Twenty years postloss, the widowed thought about their spouse once every week or 2 and had a conversation about their spouse once a month on average. About 12.6 years postloss, the widowed reported feeling upset between sometimes and rarely when they thought about their spouse. These findings add to an understanding of the time course of grief.
bereavement, widowhood, continuing bonds, meaning, positive growth
0022-3514
476-492
Carnelley, Katherine B.
02a55020-a0bc-480e-a0ff-c8fe56ee9c36
Wortman, Camille B.
7527cb48-50ea-4960-9420-5f675fd5fbd0
Bolger, Niall
a986f319-9fe1-45e3-bed0-47adc38d4ac9
Burke, Christopher T.
6e4f7657-527a-48a7-9e79-e30dcebaf5e4
Carnelley, Katherine B.
02a55020-a0bc-480e-a0ff-c8fe56ee9c36
Wortman, Camille B.
7527cb48-50ea-4960-9420-5f675fd5fbd0
Bolger, Niall
a986f319-9fe1-45e3-bed0-47adc38d4ac9
Burke, Christopher T.
6e4f7657-527a-48a7-9e79-e30dcebaf5e4

Carnelley, Katherine B., Wortman, Camille B., Bolger, Niall and Burke, Christopher T. (2006) The time course of grief reactions to spousal loss: evidence from a national probability sample. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 91 (3), 476-492. (doi:10.1037/0022-3514.91.3.476).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Most studies of widowhood have focused on reactions during the first few years postloss. The authors investigated whether widowhood had more enduring effects using a nationally representative U.S. sample. Participants were 768 individuals who had lost their spouse (from a few months to 64 years) prior to data collection. Results indicated that the widowed continued to talk, think, and feel emotions about their lost spouse decades later. Twenty years postloss, the widowed thought about their spouse once every week or 2 and had a conversation about their spouse once a month on average. About 12.6 years postloss, the widowed reported feeling upset between sometimes and rarely when they thought about their spouse. These findings add to an understanding of the time course of grief.

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More information

Published date: 2006
Keywords: bereavement, widowhood, continuing bonds, meaning, positive growth

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 40379
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40379
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: 029a15df-bc5f-4412-9308-21eb8177ccfd
ORCID for Katherine B. Carnelley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4064-8576

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:18

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Contributors

Author: Camille B. Wortman
Author: Niall Bolger
Author: Christopher T. Burke

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