February 21, 2007

Yearning after Death

After a loved one dies, the most common reaction is yearning, not depression, a study shows, underscoring what most anyone knows.

Yearning most common after loved one's death

The study found that the most characteristic feature of bereavement after a death by natural causes "is more about yearning and pining and missing the person -- a hunger for having them come back," said senior author Holly Prigerson, director of Dana-Farber's Center for Psycho-Oncology and Palliative Care Research.

"The focus on depression is misguided," she said in an interview. Yearning "really dominates the psychological picture, (with a feeling) that a part of you is missing and that without this essential piece you won't be happy."
--
"People never get over a loss, they just get used to it," Prigerson said. "Even years after someone dies, they get pangs of grief, they need to think about the person, and they miss them with heartache," she said. "That's normal. But intense levels beyond that become problematic."

Posted by Jill Fallon at February 21, 2007 7:44 AM | TrackBack | Permalink
Comments
Post a comment









Remember personal info?