Chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

External Factors Influencing Grief Reactions in Children & Adolescents

A
  • Media depictions of Losses and Grief
  • Family system reactions to loss (values, beliefs, behaviors)
  • Relationship between the child/adolescent
  • And the person from whom they are separated by death or symbolic loss
  • Reactions of peers and other adults
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2
Q

Developmental Issues: Infancy and Early Childhood

A
  • Dependency/Attachment
  • Limited object constancy
  • Limited ability to verbalize
  • Lack coping strategies to regulate tension
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3
Q

Developmental Issues: Children under 2 ½

A

Understanding of illness/death

  • Cannotunderstanddeath.
  • Cannot differentiate parent’s absence for a short time from a long time.
  • Can sense loss or change in something but cannot verbalize it

Reactions to loss

  • Expresses discomfort or insecurity through frequent crying or protest
  • Expresses distress or sadness through withdrawal, loss of interest in usual activities
  • Changes in eating and sleeping patterns
  • May cling or scream when parent tries to leave

Interventions

  • Maintain normal routines, familiar surroundings
  • Provide a consistent caregiver who can give frequent and
  • Lengthy periods of love & attention, hugging
  • Explain changes in terms of how they will affect child
  • Consistent, gentle physical and verbal reassurance and comfort
  • Express confidence in the child and the world
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4
Q

Toddlers (2 ½ to 4 years)

A

Reactions to loss

  • Toddlers react to changes they see around them
  • They may have difficulty communicating distress in words; communicate in behavior
  • They take cues from others’ behavior-if others cry, they cry
  • They may become very active-running, jumping, yelling to show themselves
  • And show others they are not dead or to get attention they are missing.
  • They may intermittently express sadness, listen to explanations, then return to play.
  • They may express anger at dead parent for leaving them
  • And at others for changes/disruptions in routines.
  • They may ask repeatedly for parent and cling to substitute caregiver

What can help

  • Physical expressions of affection & closeness
  • Reassurance that they will be loved and taken care of
  • Maintain familiar routines and surroundings
  • Explore what they know and understand
  • Reinforce that they did not do anything to cause the illness or death
  • Share feelings in simple, brief ways- “I’m sad, I miss mommy”
  • Reassure them about the health and wellbeing of the surviving parent
  • Use correct terms for death
  • Avoid equating death with sleep or the child may be afraid to go to sleep
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5
Q

Developmental Issues: School Age Children 6-9

A
  • Relationships with both peers and adults important
  • Striving for mastery of information, tasks
  • Superego and sense of responsibility developing
  • Concrete thinking
  • Understanding of illness/death
  • Curious about death, ask concrete questions about what happens to one’s body
  • Death is personified as a person or spirit: skeleton, ghost, angel of death, bogeyman
  • Although death is perceived as final and frightening it is not universal
  • Children this age begin to compromise, recognizing that death is final and real
  • But mostly happens to the elderly (not to themselves)

What can help

  • Clear explanations of death, without euphemisms
  • Acknowledgement of feelings
  • Address questions honestly and directly.
  • Provide reassurance that they did not cause death
  • Provide reassurance about their own security
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6
Q

School Age: 10-12

A

Understanding of illness/death

  • Recognizes that everyone will die (even themselves)
  • Interested in and capable of understanding biological processes
  • Heightened emotions and sensitivity to others’ emotions (guilt, anger, shame)
  • Regressive and impulsive behaviors indicate stress
  • Increased awareness of vulnerability

Reactions to Loss

  • Reactions often reflect what has been learned from parents and other adults around them
  • Family’s spiritual beliefs often evident in the child’s statements about death and coping
  • Most bereaved children do not show serious emotional/behavioral disturbances
  • Capable of empathy & expressing caring to others who grieving/share similar experiences
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7
Q

Developmental Issues: Adolescents

A
  • Searching for identity
  • Interest in sex and intimacy
  • Peer relationships very important
  • Abstract thinking
  • Exposure to maladaptive behaviors
  • Responses to stress

Understanding of Death

  • Adolescents comprehend that death is permanent, irreversible, and affects everyone.
  • While they cognitively understand that death is final and inevitable
  • Their behavior may indicate denial

Reactions to Loss

  • Capable of mature and thoughtful reflections on the meaning of life and death
  • And may struggle with existential questions
  • Exposure to maladaptive coping strategies
  • Substance use, risk taking, and sexual experimentation; “parentification”
  • Talking openly about death, indicating that the subject is not off limits
    • Verbal or written explanations that tears, sadness, anger, guilt, and confusion
    • Providing opportunities for adolescents to hear from & talk with peers experiencing loss
    • Bereavement groups & retreats can be effective
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8
Q

Needs All Children Have in Coping with Trauma and Loss

A
  • Information
  • Emotional Support
  • Room to Act
  • Respite and Renewal
  • Hope
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