
Psychiatric News August 20, 2004
Volume 39 Number 16
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association
p. 22
Youngsters Can Experience Traumatic Grief
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Traumatic grief in young people is distinct from both depression and
posttraumatic stress disorder. Nonetheless, traumatic grief can predict both
depression and posttraumatic stress disorder.
It's a heart-wrenching yearning, searching for a deceased loved one,
bittersweet recollections about that person, a conviction that to grieve less
would be a betrayal of the beloved.
It is a riffling of papers for remnants of the deceased, a frantic
listening for the person's footsteps on the stairwell....
"It" is unresolved or pathological griefso-called
traumatic griefand a phenomenon mostly studied in adults who have lost
their spouses.
But can adolescents, teenagers, and young adults also experience traumatic
grief? It appears that they can, a study in the August American Journal of
Psychiatry suggests. The study was headed by Nadine Melhem, Ph.D., an
assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh.
"This study is the first that we are aware of to look at traumatic
grief among adolescents," Melhem and her colleagues wrote.
The study included 130 friends and acquaintances of 26 suicide victims. The
friends and acquaintances were identified in the Pittsburgh area between 1988
and 1991. They ranged in age from 11 to 23 years, with an average age of 18.
The subjects were interviewed around six months, one to 1.5 years, and three
years after the suicides that impacted their lives.
The instruments used to assess the subjects for traumatic grief were the
Texas Revised Inventory of Grief and the Inventory of Complicated Grief. The
former is a 21-item scale designed to measure the extent of traumatic grief.
It asks subjects to indicate whether certain statementsfor example,
"I get upset when I think about him or her" or "An unusual
numbness comes over me when I think of him or her"pertain to
them. The latter, a 19-item scale, is the most widely used instrument to
assess traumatic grief and is thought to discriminate better between traumatic
grief and normal grief than does the former.
Of the 130 subjects studied, 29 experienced traumatic grief at six months,
five at one year to 1.5 years, and nine at three years, the investigators
found. This finding thus demonstrated that traumatic grief can occur in
adolescents, teens, and young adults.
The investigators also determined how many of the subjects experienced
major depression at six months, one to 1.5 years, and three yearsthe
numbers were 38, 17, and 26, respectively. The number of subjects who
experienced posttraumatic stress disorder at the three time intervals was
three, three, and four, respectively.
The researchers also found that traumatic grief was independent of
depression. Moreover, depressed and nondepressed subjects were equally likely
to develop traumatic grief, and traumatic grief and posttraumatic stress
disorder did not always overlap in the same subjects. Thus, traumatic grief
appears to be distinct from depression and posttraumatic stress disorder in
young people.
Still another interesting finding that emerged from the study is that
traumatic grief in young people appears to predict the onset of depression or
posttraumatic stress disorder.
"Traumatic grief is an underrecognized condition that occurs in
adults of all ages, and in adolescents and children, following the death of a
close friend or relative," Katherine Shear, M.D., a professor of
psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh and one of the study authors, said
in an interview. "This condition bears some resemblance to major
depression and some to posttraumatic stress disorder but is different from
each of these DSM-IV conditions. In adults, we have found traumatic
grief to be a chronic, persistent condition associated with a great deal of
psychological pain and functional impairment. There is some evidence that it
predicts physical health problems as well. In both adolescents and adults,
traumatic grief has been associated with increased suicidality."
"This is a very important study in this new area of research,"
Randall Marshall, M.D., director of trauma studies at New York State
Psychiatric Institute, told Psychiatric News, "because it uses
a rigorous, longitudinal design to clarify several important and controversial
questions about the validity of traumatic grief, about traumatic grief in
adolescents specifically, and about the natural course of the disorder in
relation to major depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. The study
offers more confirmation that the proposed nosological distinction between
grief, posttraumatic stress disorder, and major depressive disorder is
valid."
"Dr. Katherine Shear has led the development and research of a
much-needed, promising new psychosocial intervention for the treatment of
traumatic grief, and results of her treatment study should soon be
available," Naomi Simon, M.D., associate director of the Center for
Anxiety and Traumatic Stress Related Disorders at Massachusetts General
Hospital, added. "Because of the very compelling findings in studies
such as these, in collaboration with Dr. Shear, we have recently initiated the
development of a clinical and research program of traumatic grief here at [our
center]."
The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.
The study, "Traumatic Grief Among Adolescents Exposed to a
Peer's Suicide," is posted online at
<http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/161/8/1411>.
Am J Psychiatry 2004 161 1411[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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