Abstract

ContextGrief researchers are concerned that the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic will precipitate increases in severe, persistent, and disabling grief, termed prolonged grief disorder or persistent complex bereavement disorder. We recently demonstrated that higher grief levels are experienced after COVID-19-related bereavement than natural bereavement. Death circumstances during the pandemic (e.g., reduced social support, limited opportunities for death rituals) may also hamper the grief process for non-COVID-19-related bereavement, yet no quantitative research has specifically addressed this issue. ObjectivesTo test if grief severity is higher during than before the lockdown after non-COVID-19-related bereavement. MethodsA cross-sectional survey including questions on sociodemographic and loss-related variables and a grief measure was conducted among a sample of 1600 bereaved adults (78% females), participating before (n = 731) or during (n = 869) the pandemic, including people who had experienced a loss before the pandemic (n = 456) or during the pandemic (n = 200) recently (five months ago or less). ResultsNo significant differences emerged between grief levels in people participating before or during the pandemic. However, being recently bereaved during the pandemic elicited more severe grief than before it (d = 0.17; d = 0.18). Effects remained significant after controlling analyses for relevant loss-related variables. ConclusionAmong all bereaved persons, grief severity was no different during the pandemic compared with before the pandemic. However, experiencing a recent loss during the pandemic elicited more severe acute grief reactions than before the pandemic, suggesting that dealing with loss may be more difficult during this ongoing health crisis.

Highlights

  • With more than 35 million confirmed cases and one million deaths worldwide, coronavirus disease 2019Accepted for publication: October 7, 2020.Ó 2020 The Authors

  • Bereaved people who participated during the pandemic did not differ from bereaved people who participated before the pandemic on demographic variables, loss-related variables, social support satisfaction, or grief severity (PCBD symptoms, t[1598] 1⁄4 0.71, P 1⁄4 0.48, d 1⁄4 0.04; prolonged grief disorder (PGD) symptoms, t[1598] 1⁄4 0.20, P 1⁄4 0.84, d 1⁄4 0.01)

  • To the best of our knowledge, this is the first quantitative study to compare grief before and during the COVID pandemic among people bereaved through other causes of death than COVID-19

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Summary

Introduction

With more than 35 million confirmed cases and one million deaths worldwide, coronavirus disease 2019Accepted for publication: October 7, 2020.Ó 2020 The Authors. Eisma and Tamminga (COVID-19) is one of the deadliest and widespread viral outbreaks of the past century.. To reduce the spread of COVID-19, governments have introduced policy measures, such as social distancing and restrictions on assembly and travel. This resulted in substantial societal changes affecting many aspects of our everyday lives, including how we die and mourn our dead

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