Cuddy-Casey M, Orvaschel H
Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33314, USA.
Clin Psychol Rev. 1997;17(1):33-45. doi: 10.1016/s0272-7358(96)00044-x.
This review examines children's understanding of death and how such understanding may be related to the increasing incidence of child suicidality and homicidality. Several factors have been reported to influence children's acquisition of the concepts of death. Those most often reported involved include children's age, cognitive development, and exposure to death; religion and culture appear to play a more minimal role. Most of what we know about how and when children begin to understand death is derived from research with healthy children. Although less robust, the data available from chronically physically ill children and suicidal children indicate some distortions in and less mature concepts of death. These distortions may indeed make death appear more attractive and less permanent to some suicidal children. Despite these provocative findings, no similar investigations have been conducted with homicidal children. Implications of these data for future research and potential intervention are discussed.
本综述探讨了儿童对死亡的理解,以及这种理解可能如何与儿童自杀和杀人发生率的上升相关。据报道,有几个因素会影响儿童对死亡概念的认知。最常被提及的因素包括儿童的年龄、认知发展以及对死亡的接触;宗教和文化似乎所起的作用较小。我们所了解的关于儿童如何以及何时开始理解死亡的大部分内容都来自对健康儿童的研究。虽然数据不如前者充分,但来自慢性病患儿和自杀儿童的数据表明,他们对死亡的概念存在一些扭曲且不够成熟。这些扭曲可能确实会让死亡对一些自杀儿童来说显得更具吸引力且不那么永恒。尽管有这些引人深思的发现,但尚未对杀人儿童进行类似的调查。本文还讨论了这些数据对未来研究和潜在干预措施的启示。