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Prolonged Grief Disorder and the DSM
Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 2023Abstract In the early 1990s, a research group that included Holly Prigerson and Charles Reynolds established that disordered grief overlaps with depression and anxiety but is not the same. They also developed a research inventory for studying disordered grief.
Zachar, Peter +2 more
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Prolonged Grief Disorder: Course, Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment
Focus, 2021Losing a loved one is one of life's greatest stressors. Although most bereaved individuals navigate through a period of intense acute grief that lessens with time, approximately 10% will develop a prolonged grief condition. This review provides an overview of the course of grief and describes risk factors for developing prolonged grief disorder.
Kristin L, Szuhany +3 more
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Deconstructing grief: a sociological analysis of Prolonged Grief Disorder
Social Theory & Health, 2020This article discusses the forthcoming diagnostic classification of Prolonged Grief Disorder in light of sociological perspectives. By placing death and grief at the center of human life and culture, the beginning pathologization of grief may be discussed in regards to contemporary societal transformations.
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Journal of Christian Nursing, 2023
ABSTRACT: Prolonged grief disorder (PGD), sometimes called complicated grief, can impair a person's ability to function in daily life and elevate the risk for physical and mental decompensation. In 2022, PGD was added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR), increasing the potential for treatment with ...
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ABSTRACT: Prolonged grief disorder (PGD), sometimes called complicated grief, can impair a person's ability to function in daily life and elevate the risk for physical and mental decompensation. In 2022, PGD was added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR), increasing the potential for treatment with ...
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Der Nervenarzt, 2019
Grief is a natural response to the loss of a loved one and its intensity usually lessens over time. Approximately 10% of bereaved persons, however, experience persistent symptoms resulting in the development of a prolonged grief disorder (PGD). A PGD shows a distinct symptom cluster and is considered for inclusion as a diagnosis in the upcoming ...
J, Treml, A, Kersting
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Grief is a natural response to the loss of a loved one and its intensity usually lessens over time. Approximately 10% of bereaved persons, however, experience persistent symptoms resulting in the development of a prolonged grief disorder (PGD). A PGD shows a distinct symptom cluster and is considered for inclusion as a diagnosis in the upcoming ...
J, Treml, A, Kersting
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Risk Factors of Prolonged Grief Disorder
OMEGA - Journal of Death and DyingProlonged Grief Disorder (PGD) is characterized by extensive yearning, which includes a strong desire, for the deceased that occurs for at least 12 months. The aim of this study was to identify risk factors that contribute to PGD including the type of loss, relationship to the deceased, and coping.
Emma Quadlander-Goff, Jill Meyer
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Prolonged grief disorder – Authors' reply
The Lancet Psychiatry, 2022Joanne, Cacciatore, Allen, Frances
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Personal goals and prolonged grief disorder symptoms
Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 2010AbstractProlonged grief disorder (PGD, previously called complicated grief) is a debilitating condition that can develop following the loss of a loved one. The present study investigated the relationship between different features of personal goals of bereaved individuals and PGD symptom severity.
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Diagnosis of prolonged grief disorder (PGD)
2018This chapter provides a synthesis and up-to-date summary of studies on prolonged grief disorder (PGD)—an intense, persistent, and disabling response to loss experienced by a significant minority of bereaved individuals. Circumstances surrounding cause of death, relationship with the deceased, and predisposing characteristics of the bereaved individual ...
Allison M. Marziliano +2 more
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