Psychological Consequences of Pregnancy Loss and Infant Death in a Sample of Bereaved Parents |
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Authors: | Siobhan Murphy Ask Elklit |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Psychology , University of Ulster at Magee , Londonderry , Northern Ireland;2. Psychology Institute , University of Southern Denmark , Odense , Denmark;3. National Center for Psychotraumatology , Odense , Denmark |
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Abstract: | This study aimed to explore a broad range of psychological reactions to trauma in a sample of bereaved parents in order to assess whether the traumatic framework is adequate for describing the entire range of emotional reactions to infant death. A sample of bereaved parents (N = 455) who lost their child through perinatal or postnatal loss were compared to a control group of parents (N = 110) who gave birth to a healthy child. Multivariate regression analysis clearly demonstrated that bereaved parents scored significantly higher on the Depression, Anxiety, Dissociation, Sleep Disturbances, Somatization, Interpersonal Sensitivity, and Aggression subscales of the Trauma Symptom Checklist. Consistent with previous studies, the results showed that for up to 5 years postloss bereaved parents expressed elevated levels of trauma-specific and psychological outcomes, in particular interpersonal sensitivity and aggression. |
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Keywords: | multivariate regression parental bereavement perinatal loss postnatal loss trauma |
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