Bereavement in Very Old Age: Impact on Health and Relationships of the Loss of a Spouse, a Child, a Sibling, or a Close Friend

This article deals with the following two questions: In very old age, which are the main sources of bereavement? And what are the consequences of such losses on health and on relationships? The findings are based on the complete set of data compiled in the course of the Swiss Interdisciplinary Longi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Omega: Journal of Death and Dying 2009-01, Vol.60 (4), p.301-325
Hauptverfasser: d'Epinay, Christian J. Lalive, Cavalli, Stefano, Guillet, Luc A.
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container_issue 4
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container_title Omega: Journal of Death and Dying
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creator d'Epinay, Christian J. Lalive
Cavalli, Stefano
Guillet, Luc A.
description This article deals with the following two questions: In very old age, which are the main sources of bereavement? And what are the consequences of such losses on health and on relationships? The findings are based on the complete set of data compiled in the course of the Swiss Interdisciplinary Longitudinal Study on the Oldest Old (SWILSOO), which provided a 10-year follow-up of a first cohort (1994–2004) and a 5-year follow-up of a second (1999–2004). The data revealed that, in very old age, the great majority of the dear ones who died were either siblings or close friends. Taken as a whole, the bereaved suffered a marked and lasting increase in depressive symptoms, together with a short-term deterioration in their functional status; those bereft of a spouse or a child saw their functional status worsen and exhibited enduring depressive symptoms but they also benefited from support in the form of increased interaction; those bereft of siblings only suffered from a mild, short-term deterioration in functional status; those who had lost a close friend suffered a very significant increase in depressive symptoms. In the medium term, most of these effects disappeared, lending weight to the claim that the survivors manage to cope with the misfortunes of life.
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subjects Activities of Daily Living
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Attitude to Death
Bereavement
Close friends
Death & dying
Depression
Depression - psychology
Family
Female
Functional status
Grief
Health Status
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Life Change Events
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Mental depression
Mental health
Oldest old people
Siblings
Social Support
Spouses
Surveys and Questionnaires
Survivors - psychology
Switzerland
Very old
title Bereavement in Very Old Age: Impact on Health and Relationships of the Loss of a Spouse, a Child, a Sibling, or a Close Friend
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