Submitted by Franklin Cook on Mon, 03/21/2011 - 15:40
An excellent article -- "Grief and Bereavement: What Psychiatrists Need to Know" -- is available from World Psychiatry on PubMed Central.* The authors, Sidney Zisook and Katherine Shear, summarize the importance of their topic by noting that
After completing their education and formal training, psychiatrists may not be fully prepared to handle some of the most common clinical challenges they will face in practice. Diagnosing and treating complicated grief and bereavement related major depression will undoubtedly rank high on the list of such challenges. Both conditions overlap with symptoms found in ordinary, uncomplicated grief, and often are written off as "normal" with the assumption that time, strength of character, and the natural support system will heal.
Submitted by Franklin Cook on Sun, 03/20/2011 - 00:00
Novelist Adam Haslett has added to the Wall Street Journal's "Five Best" series "Deathless Accounts of Mourning," which delineates the five books Haslett would recommend on the topic of grief. I am sharing Haslett's list in order to invite Suicide Grief: News & Comment readers to add a comment describing their favorite book about grief. Here are Haslett's choices and commentary:
Submitted by Franklin Cook on Tue, 03/08/2011 - 09:43
The Scranton Times-Tribune ran a feature yesterday that aptly portrays the impact one caregiver is having in the aftermath of suicide in her community. In "Therapist on Front Lines of Suicide," staff writer Chris Kelly tells the story of Jean Rosencrance, Director of Trauma Services for the Lackawanna County District Attorney's Office, who is responsible for death notifications.
Ms. Rosencrance wears many hats. She counsels victims, survivors and police, fire and emergency personnel, is a SWAT team negotiator and a terrorism threat analyst. She is also a mom to three teenagers, and as much as her years of training and experience, it is that job that qualifies her to knock on the doors of homes that will be broken by what she has to say.
Submitted by Franklin Cook on Sun, 03/06/2011 - 22:20
The recent Time magazine article, "New Ways to Think About Grief," counters what its author, Ruth Davis Konigsberg, considers to be five myths of grief, an obvious twist on the "five stages of grief" popularized by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross more than 40 years ago (and which is first on her list of "myths").
The article is based on Konigsberg's new book, The Truth about Grief, which has prompted scrutiny from the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC), and a mixed response from ADEC Past President Robert Neimeyer, a preeminent expert on grief whose research is referenced in the Time article and in The Truth about Grief. In fact, Neimeyer and fellow researcher Joseph Currier take the position that Konigsberg's view of the value of grief counseling (see Myth No. 5, below) tells only half of the truth.
Pages
Recent comments