AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how bereaved parents' efforts to find meaning after the death of their child are influenced by their and their partner's coping styles, which are categorized as loss coping (focused on the loss) and restoration coping (focused on the stresses following the loss).
  • Researchers surveyed 227 couples over 20 months using the Dual Coping Inventory and a specific meaning-made scale to measure their coping strategies and the meaning they derived from the loss.
  • The findings suggest that a combination of both parents' coping styles positively impacts their ability to make meaning from the loss, while one partner's loss coping negatively affects the other's meaning-making process, emphasizing the need for flexibility in coping and partner support.

Article Abstract

The present study aimed to examine whether bereaved parents "meaning-made"-defined as results of attempts to reduce discrepancies between the meaning assigned to the death of the child and self and world-views-was influenced by their own and their partner's coping orientations. Coping orientations were conceptualized within the Dual Process Model, which entails loss coping orientation (LO; focus on the loss itself), restoration coping orientations (RO; focus on stressors that come about as an indirect consequence of the bereavement), and a flexible oscillation between both coping orientations. The sample consisted of 227 couples identified through obituary notices in local and national newspapers, who provided data at 6, 13, and 20 months after the death of their child. At all three points of measurement, both partners independently completed the Dual Coping Inventory (DCI) and a scale developed by the authors about meaning-made from the loss. Data were analyzed using a multi-level Actor-Partner Interdependence Model. Results show that the combination of parents' own LO and RO (operationalized through the interaction effect between LO and RO) have a positive effect in parents' meaning-made. Partners' LO have a negative effect in parents' meaning-made. These results highlight the importance of, in the context of parental bereavement, being flexible by using both coping orientations, and of acknowledging the interdependence between partners, namely, the interpersonal process by which partner's coping affect one's meaning-made.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5453584PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0178861PLOS

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