Abstract

ProblemSibling bereavement is one of the most distressing adverse life events during childhood but has received less attention in research than other forms of childhood bereavement. This integrative review identifies potential risk and protective factors for maladaptive coping following sibling bereavement and the influence of these factors on adjustment to loss. Eligibility criteriaArticles were limited to peer-reviewed studies, published in English in 2000 and beyond. Target population was bereaved siblings 0–18 years, and outcomes examined grief experiences by child self-report or parent-proxy report. SampleThe Whittemore and Knafl integrative framework was applied. Multidimensional Grief Theory guided the review with twenty-five studies synthesized across its domains: Separation Distress, Existential/Identity Crisis, and Circumstance-Related Distress. ResultsAdjustment following sibling death is a complex process associated with a host of risk and protective factors that contribute to the bereavement process for this population. Age, sex, circumstance-related factors, continuing bonds, parental distress, and limited social support were critical influencing factors. ConclusionDefinitive predictor variables were not identified but a combination of variables that influence the adjustment of bereaved siblings are discussed. ImplicationsFuture research is needed to explore the risk and protective factors of maladaptive coping to inform intervention development to promote individual and family adjustment following sibling death.

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