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  • Grief - American Psychological Association (APA)
    Grief often includes physiological distress, separation anxiety, confusion, yearning, obsessive dwelling on the past, and apprehension about the future Intense grief can become life-threatening through disruption of the immune system, self-neglect, and suicidal thoughts
  • APA Dictionary of Psychology
    Grief often includes physiological distress, separation anxiety, confusion, yearning, obsessive dwelling on the past, and apprehension about the future Intense grief can become life-threatening through disruption of the immune system, self-neglect, and suicidal thoughts
  • The nature and causes of grief. - APA PsycNet
    Definitions of grief in the bereavement literature uniformly adopt the inclusive view,in which grief is a general term embracing many affective states The following definition is both representative and authoritative: "This usual reaction to bereavement [i e , intense distress] is termed grief, defined as a primarily emotional (affective) reaction to the loss of a loved one through death It
  • Grief: Coping with the loss of your loved one
    Research shows that most people can recover from loss on their own through the passage of time if they have social support and healthy habits
  • APA Dictionary of Psychology
    a response to death (or, sometimes, to other significant loss or trauma) that deviates significantly from normal expectations Three different types of complicated grief are posited: chronic grief, which is intense, prolonged, or both; delayed grief; and absent grief The most often observed form of complicated grief is the pattern in which the immediate response to the loss is exceptionally
  • Prolonged Grief Disorder - American Psychological Association (APA)
    Keywords: prolonged grief, complicated grief, pathological grief, traumatic grief, psychotherapy Nearly every life includes the loss of a loved one, and nearly every psychologist’s professional life includes encounters with patients for whom such a loss causes unusually prolonged and disabling grief
  • APA Dictionary of Psychology
    grief that society (or some element of it) limits, does not expect, or may not allow a person to express Examples include the grief of parents for stillborn babies, of teachers for the death of students, and of nurses for the death of patients
  • Disenfranchised grief in historical and cultural perspective.
    I define disenfranchised grief as grief that results when a person experiences a significant loss and the resultant grief is not openly acknowledged, socially validated, or publicly mourned In short, although the individual is experiencing a grief reaction, there is no social recognition that the person has a right to grieve or a claim for social sympathy or support (PsycInfo Database Record


















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