TY - JOUR
T1 - Ruminative coping as avoidance
T2 - A reinterpretation of its function in adjustment to bereavement
AU - Stroebe, M.
AU - Boelen, P.A.
AU - van den Hout, M.A.
AU - Stroebe, W.
AU - Salemink, E.
AU - van den Bout, J.
PY - 2007
Y1 - 2007
N2 - The paper argues for a reconceptualization of ruminative coping with the death of a loved one as an avoidant rather than a confrontational strategy. Ruminative coping has been characterized within the bereavement field as persistent, repetitive and passive focus on negative emotions and symptoms. It has been theoretically described and empirically shown to be a maladaptive process, being conceptually related to complicated/chronic/prolonged grief. Furthermore, it has been contrasted with denial and suppression processes--which, too, have been understood to be maladaptive and associated with major complications following bereavement. Here evidence is reviewed and the case made that rumination is not an opposite form of coping from suppression or denial, but that it is a similar phenomenon to these, and different from the types of confrontation that take place in so-called "grief work". Implications with respect to intervention for complicated grief are discussed.
AB - The paper argues for a reconceptualization of ruminative coping with the death of a loved one as an avoidant rather than a confrontational strategy. Ruminative coping has been characterized within the bereavement field as persistent, repetitive and passive focus on negative emotions and symptoms. It has been theoretically described and empirically shown to be a maladaptive process, being conceptually related to complicated/chronic/prolonged grief. Furthermore, it has been contrasted with denial and suppression processes--which, too, have been understood to be maladaptive and associated with major complications following bereavement. Here evidence is reviewed and the case made that rumination is not an opposite form of coping from suppression or denial, but that it is a similar phenomenon to these, and different from the types of confrontation that take place in so-called "grief work". Implications with respect to intervention for complicated grief are discussed.
U2 - 10.1007/s00406-007-0746-y
DO - 10.1007/s00406-007-0746-y
M3 - Article
SN - 0940-1334
VL - 257
SP - 462
EP - 472
JO - Archiv fur Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten
JF - Archiv fur Psychiatrie und Nervenkrankheiten
ER -