When you are speaking of post-loss and grief, I assume you are speaking
of dealing with the death of another person. I thought the Kubler-Ross
stages were stages the individual goes through in dealing with their own
impending death. I don't see how bargaining or any of the other stages
makes a lot of sense when we are talking about grief about someone
else's death.

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman, Chair
Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
Box 3055
x7295
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
http://www.jbu.edu/academics/hss/faculty/rfroman.asp 

Proverbs 14:15 "A simple man believes anything, but a prudent man gives
thought to his steps." 


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2007 1:00 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Giving Kubler-Ross some grief

Data at last. It seems that denial isn't what it's supposed to be.  
Instead, it's acceptance all the way (well, most of the way) down. 

See:

 Maciejewski, P. et al (2007, February 21, actually). An Empirical 
Examination of the Stage Theory of Grief. JAMA. 2007;297:716-723

Their results show that "counter to stage theory, disbelief [denial--SB]

was not the initial, dominant grief indicator. Acceptance was the most 
frequently endorsed item and yearning was the dominant negative grief 
indicator from 1 to 24 months postloss"

They conclude that "in the circumstance of natural death, the normal 
response involves primarily acceptance and yearning for the deceased".

Are grief counsellors going to change their tune? I wouldn't bet on it.

Read the full story (free!) here:

http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/reprint/297/7/716

Stephen

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Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.          
Department of Psychology     
Bishop's University                e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
2600 College St.
Sherbrooke QC  J1M 0C8
Canada

Dept web page at http://www.ubishops.ca/ccc/div/soc/psy
TIPS discussion list for psychology teachers at
http://faculty.frostburg.edu/psyc/southerly/tips/index.htm
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