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Does post-traumatic growth follow parental death in adulthood? An empirical investigation.
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Does post-traumatic growth follow parental death in adulthood? An empirical investigation.

Komal Qasim and Jerome Carson
OMEGA—Journal of Death and Dying, Vol.86(1), pp.25-44
24/09/2020

Abstract

Psychology
This study looked at the loss of a parent in adulthood and whether this was followed by post-traumatic growth? Participants, 100 bereaved adults, from Pakistan and England, lost parents in the last 10 years. They completed three questionnaires. The study hypotheses were, first, that participants whose bereavement occurred more than five years ago would show significantly higher levels of post-traumatic growth. Second, participants with higher levels of post-traumatic growth would experience significantly higher grief scores. Thirdly, participants with higher levels of post-traumatic growth would show significantly higher levels of coping skills. Two hypotheses were rejected, only one received partial support. Yet, levels of post-traumatic growth were high in this sample. Post-traumatic growth does not follow every bereavement. The authors provide autoethnographic material to challenge this. Circumstances surrounding bereavement during the Covid-19 pandemic, are more likely to lead to increases in complicated grief reactions, rather than post-traumatic growth.
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