Ciência-IUL
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Publication Detailed Description
The stigmatization of prolonged grief disorder and disenfranchised grief: A vignette-based experimental study
Journal Title
Death Studies
Year (definitive publication)
N/A
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
Web of Science®
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Abstract
People with prolonged grief disorder (PGD) are at risk of public stigma, but research has yet
to examine whether stigma is shaped by different types of relationship losses. In an
experimental study, we asked participants (N = 306) to read three scenarios in which targets
lost their romantic partner, child, or companion animal. Targets with PGD (vs. integrated grief)
elicited more negative emotional reactions and attributions, and their experiences were
perceived as less legitimate. Targets who lost their companion animal (vs. other relationship
losses) were perceived as the most sensitive and their grief as the least legitimate, but they
also elicited the lowest prosocial and fear reactions and were perceived as the warmest.
Lastly, targets with PGD who lost their companion animal (vs. other relationship losses)
elicited more negative emotional reactions and attributions, and their experiences were
perceived as less legitimate. Implications and suggestions for future studies are discussed.
Acknowledgements
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Keywords
grief,public stigma,emotional reactions,attributions,perceived legitimacy
Fields of Science and Technology Classification
- Psychology - Social Sciences
- Other Social Sciences - Social Sciences
Funding Records
Funding Reference | Funding Entity |
---|---|
023.05086.BDANA | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia |
2020.00523.CEECIND | Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia |