Barry Lisa C, Kasl Stanislav V, Prigerson Holly G
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2002 Jul-Aug;10(4):447-57.
The authors evaluated the association between bereaved persons' perceptions of the death (e.g., extent of suffering) and preparedness for the death and psychiatric disorders. The sample was 122 persons who received a baseline interview at approximately 4 months post-loss and a follow-up interview 5 months later, at approximately 9 months post-loss. In addition to bivariate associations between perceptions of circumstances of death and psychiatric outcomes, authors used multivariate logistic-regression models to determine the extent to which perceptions of the death were associated with the likelihood of psychiatric disorders in survivors at baseline and follow-up. Perception of the death as more violent was associated with major depressive disorder at baseline. Perception of lack of preparedness for the death was associated with complicated grief at baseline and at follow-up. These preliminary results suggest that perceptions of the death and feelings of lack of preparedness for it may be indicators of persons at risk of developing psychiatric morbidity secondary to bereavement. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings.
作者评估了丧亲者对死亡的认知(如痛苦程度)与对死亡的准备情况及精神障碍之间的关联。样本为122人,他们在丧亲后约4个月接受了基线访谈,并在5个月后的丧亲后约9个月接受了随访访谈。除了死亡情况认知与精神结果之间的双变量关联外,作者还使用多变量逻辑回归模型来确定在基线和随访时,对死亡的认知与幸存者患精神障碍可能性之间的关联程度。在基线时,认为死亡更暴力与重度抑郁症有关。认为对死亡缺乏准备与基线和随访时的复杂性悲伤有关。这些初步结果表明,对死亡的认知以及对死亡缺乏准备的感觉可能是丧亲后有患精神疾病风险者的指标。需要进一步研究来证实这些发现。