Journal article

The Melbourne family grief study, II: Psychosocial Morbidity and Grief in Bereaved Families

DW Kissane, S Bloch, P Onghena, DP McKenzie, RD Snyder, DL Dowe

American Journal of Psychiatry | Published : 1996

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to described the intensity of grief, the psychosocial morbidity, and the coping patterns in members of families classified according to a typology of family functioning comprising supportive, conflict-resolving, intermediate, sullen, and hostile classes. Method: One hundred fifteen families were assessed longitudinally 6 weeks (time 1), 6 months (time 2), and 13 months (time 3) after the death of a parent (constituting 670 individual responses) on measures of grief intensity, psychological state, social adjustment, and family coping. A previously described typology of perceptions of family functioning was applied. Repeated measures multivariate analysis o..

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University of Melbourne Researchers