Author:
CHEN J. H.,BIERHALS A. J.,PRIGERSON H. G.,KASL S. V.,MAZURE C. M.,JACOBS S.
Abstract
Background. This study examined whether traumatic grief,
depressive and anxiety symptoms
formed three distinct factors for widows and widowers. In addition, we
examined whether high
symptom levels of traumatic grief, depression and anxiety predicted different
mental and physical
health outcomes for widows and widowers.Method. Ninety-two future widows and 58 future widowers were
interviewed at the time of their
spouse's hospital admission and then at 6 weeks, 6, 13 and 25 month
follow-ups. Principal axis
factor analyses tested the distinctiveness of traumatic grief, depressive
and anxiety symptoms, by
gender. Repeated measures ANOVA tested for gender differences and changes
over time in mean
symptom levels of traumatic grief, depression and anxiety. Linear and logistic
regression models
estimated the effects of high symptom levels of traumatic grief, depression
and anxiety at 6 months
on health outcomes at 13 and 25 months post-intake by gender.Results. Three distinct symptom clusters (i.e. traumatic grief,
depressive and anxiety symptoms)
were found to emerge for both widows and widowers. Widows had higher mean
levels of traumatic
grief, depressive and anxiety symptoms. High symptom levels of traumatic
grief measured at 6
months predicted a physical health event (e.g. cancer, heart attack) at
25 months post-intake for
widows. High symptom levels of anxiety measured at 6 months predicted suicidal
ideation at 25
months for widowers.Conclusions. The results suggest that there are gender differences
in the levels of psychological
symptoms resulting from bereavement and in their effects on subsequent
mental and physical health
for widows and widowers.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
197 articles.
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