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American Behavioral Scientist
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Examining the Delayed Grief Hypothesis Across 5 Years of Bereavement

GEORGE A. BONANNO

Teachers College, Columbia University

NIGEL P. FIELD

Pacific Graduate School of Psychology

Traditional bereavement theories emphasize that it is crucial to work through the emotional meanings of a loss and that the failure to do so typically results in delayed grief symptoms. This article reports data examining these assumptions prospectively across the first 5 years of bereavement. Based on previous validity data, elevated symptoms were defined in terms of 6-month median scores for each measure. Delayed elevations were observed on isolated measures for 3 (7%) participants. However, these elevations were more parsimoniously explained by random measurement error. Furthermore, when a weighted grief-depression composite score was used to maximize the probability of capturing the true (latent) grief variable, not a single case of delayed symptom elevations was observed. Finally, data on emotional processing of the loss at 6 months failed to support the traditional assumption that minimal emotional processing of the loss would lead to delayed grief.

American Behavioral Scientist, Vol. 44, No. 5, 798-816 (2001)
DOI: 10.1177/0002764201044005007


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