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JournalISSN: 0030-2228

Omega-journal of Death and Dying 

SAGE Publishing
About: Omega-journal of Death and Dying is an academic journal published by SAGE Publishing. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Grief & Medicine. It has an ISSN identifier of 0030-2228. Over the lifetime, 2280 publications have been published receiving 39393 citations. The journal is also known as: Omega journal of death and dying.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rationale is given as to why this model was deemed necessary and how it was designed to overcome limitations of earlier models of adaptive coping with loss to put the model to stringent empirical test.
Abstract: The Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement (DPM; Stroebe & Schut, 1999) is described in this article. The rationale is given as to why this model was deemed necessary and how it was designed to overcome limitations of earlier models of adaptive coping with loss. Although building on earlier theoretical formulations, it contrasts with other models along a number of dimensions which are outlined. In addition to describing the basic parameters of the DPM, theoretical and empirical developments that have taken place since the original publication of the model are summarized. Guidelines for future research are given focusing on principles that should be followed to put the model to stringent empirical test.

598 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Grief Experience Inventory (GEI) and the MMPI were used to assess bereavement reactions in 102 newly bereaved individuals; 107 controls were also assessed as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The Grief Experience Inventory (GEI) and the MMPI were used to assess bereavement reactions in 102 newly bereaved individuals; 107 controls were also assessed. Intensities of bereavement reactions were compared across three types of deaths experienced, i.e., spouse, child, and parent. Significantly higher intensities of grief were noted in parents surviving their child's death. A distinct number of physiological symptoms were noted in the bereaved group as compared to controls. Frequent church attenders were more likely to respond with higher optimism and social desirability but more repression of bereavement responses than were less frequent church attenders. Income did not appear to contribute negatively to bereavement itself but rather to the constellation of debilitating variables which surrounds those with low income. There were no differences in bereavement intensities between those who survived a chronic-illness death as compared with sudden death situations.

386 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Social network sites can bring dying and grieving out of both the private and public realms and into the everyday life of social networks beyond the immediate family, and provide an audience for once private communications with the dead.
Abstract: The article outlines the issues that the internet presents to death studies. Part 1 describes a range of online practices that may affect dying, the funeral, grief and memorialization, inheritance and archaeology; it also summarizes the kinds of research that have been done in these fields. Part 2 argues that these new online practices have implications for, and may be illuminated by, key concepts in death studies: the sequestration (or separation from everyday life) of death and dying, disenfranchisement of grief, private grief, social death, illness and grief narratives, continuing bonds with the dead, and the presence of the dead in society. In particular, social network sites can bring dying and grieving out of both the private and public realms and into the everyday life of social networks beyond the immediate family, and provide an audience for once private communications with the dead.

279 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, principal component factor analysis (PCFA) was used to identify four orthogonal factors: Fear of Death/Dying, Approach-Oriented Death Acceptance, Escape-Orie-oriented Acceptance and Neutral Acceptance.
Abstract: Four orthogonal factors were identified by principal component factor analysis: Fear of Death/Dying, Approach-Oriented Death Acceptance, Escape-Oriented Death Acceptance, and Neutral Death Acceptance. Theta estimates of the internal consistency of the factor scales ranged from fair (.60) to good (.89). An elderly sample (n = 50) showed less fear of death and more acceptance (all three kinds of acceptance) than the middle age (n = 50) and the young (n = 50) samples. As predicted, Fear of Death/Dying was negatively related to happiness, but positively related to hopelessness, whereas Escape-Oriented Death Acceptance was positively related to hopelessness, thus providing some evidence of concurrent validity of the DAP.

246 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Child Bereavement Study investigated the emotional impact of parental death for dependent children as discussed by the authors. But the results were not consistent due to serious methodological limitations, and the results of the study were limited.
Abstract: Findings on the emotional impact of parental death for dependent children have not been consistent due to serious methodological limitations. The Child Bereavement Study investigated a community-ba...

222 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
2023137
2022290
202180
202056
201914
201819