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Original Articles

Grief Communication: Exploring Disclosure and Avoidance Across the Developmental Spectrum

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Abstract

Communicating about the death of a close other is an important, yet understudied process, particularly amongst children, adolescents, and young adults. Guided by the tenets of the Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement (DPM; Stroebe & Schut, 1999), inductive analyses of 48 in-person, in-depth interviews (12 youth and 36 young adults) suggested that participants did disclose, avoid, and oscillate when coping. In addition, four prominent themes emerged within the participants’ narratives: (a) stigmatic death, (b) religiosity, (c) social support satisfaction, and (d) role model enactment. The results suggested several directions for future research and interventions focused on communication in child-centered, death-related grief.

Notes

1. The labels “young bereaved individual” and “bereaved youth” are used interchangeably to represent children, adolescents, and young adults combined.

2. All names have been changed for confidentiality purposes.

3. Dialogue depicting cause of death is included in every excerpt. The “…” indicates that the text following occurred later in the interview.

4. Robby’s guardian noted “murder in self-defense” under his father’s cause of death on the demographic questionnaire. The interviewer e-mailed the guardian several days later to verify that all details had been included regarding the death, and no indication of cancer was ever communicated.

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