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Grief: Helping older adults with grief
Introduction
Key points
- Older adults often have many major losses
within a short period of time. For example, older adults who lose their spouses
may suffer many losses, including financial security, their best friend, and
their social contacts.
- The natural aging process brings many
losses, such as loss of beauty and physical strength.
- Older adults
may seem to overreact to a minor loss. What is considered a minor loss may
bring memories and feelings about a previous greater loss.
What is different about older adults who are grieving?
Why does an older adult who is grieving need help?
How can I help an older adult who is grieving?
Where to go from here
More information about the grieving process:
Return to topic:
What is different about older adults who are grieving?
Older adults express their grief in the same ways as younger and
middle-aged adults. However, because of their age and other life circumstances,
older adults may:
- Experience several losses within a short period
of time. Older adults are more likely than other adults to lose more than one
friend or family member within a short period of time. This can cause them to
grieve the losses at the same time or grieve over a long period of time. It may
also cause them to feel overwhelmed, numb, or have a hard time expressing their
grief.
- Not be aware that they are grieving. Older adults experience
losses related to aging. They may need to give up roles within their family.
They may lose physical strength and stamina. They may feel sad and experience
other signs of grieving without knowing that they are grieving.
- Be
unwilling to tell other people that they are grieving. They may also be
unwilling to tell other people how sad they feel when they see or care for
older loved ones who are ill or aging.
- Have long-term illnesses,
including physical and mental disabilities, that interfere with their ability
to grieve.
- Lack the support system they once had. Older adults who
depended on their spouses or other family members for social contact may lack a
support system after their spouses die or other family members move away or
die. These older adults may feel lonely and think that they have no one to
confide in.
Test Your Knowledge
-
Older adults express their grief in the same ways as
other adults.
-
True
-
False
-
Older adults are very willing to tell other people
that they are grieving.
-
True
-
False
Continue to Why does an older adult who is grieving need help?
Return to Grief: Helping older adults with grief
Why does an older adult who is grieving need help?
Older adults are more likely to become physically ill after experiencing
a major loss. They may already have long-term physical illnesses or other
conditions that interfere with their ability to grieve. The symptoms of these
illnesses may become worse when they are grieving.
Some older
adults may develop
unresolved grief or
complications associated with grieving. This may occur
more often in older adults because they are more likely to experience:
- Many major losses within a short period of
time.
- The death of their friends, including their spouses. Older
adults who lose their spouses may suffer many losses, including financial
security, their best friend, and their social contacts.
- Losses that
occur as a part of the natural aging process, such as loss of beauty and
physical strength.
- Loss of their independence or the development of
illness and other conditions that are common in older
adults.
- Anticipation of losing someone or something special to
them.
In addition, some older adults need more time than other
people to adjust to change. Adjusting to change may be hard for them and cause
them added emotional stress.
Test Your Knowledge
-
Older adults have a lot of experience with loss, so
they grieve less than other adults.
-
True
-
False
-
Older adults often become physically ill after a major
loss.
-
True
-
False
Continue to How can I help an older adult who is grieving?
Return to Grief: Helping older adults with grief
How can I help an older adult who is grieving?
Ways
you can help an older adult who is grieving include:
- Giving the person time. Sometimes older adults
need more time to become aware of their feelings and express them. Sometimes
they need more time to complete other activities as well. Giving an older
person extra time shows that you are concerned and respectful of the person's
needs.
- Pointing out signs of sadness or changes in behavior. This
may help the person become aware of his or her feelings and may help the person
feel more comfortable talking with you about how he or she
feels.
- Spending time with the person. An older adult who often
seems to be alone can benefit from your company. Invite him or her to go for a
walk or have a cup of coffee. Feelings of loneliness may last for a long time
when an older adult has lost something or someone special, especially a
spouse.
- Talking about the loss. Ask the person to talk about his or
her loss. Older people, especially those who have experienced several losses
over a short period of time, are often helped by
sharing memories of the lost person.
- Watching for signs of prolonged grieving or depression. If you
have concerns that an older adult is having difficulty working through his or
her grieving, talk with a health professional.
Older adults often have more than one loss to deal with at
a time. Talking about each separate loss may help identify the person's
feelings. Separating losses from one another may also help the person feel less
overwhelmed and more able to cope with emotional distress.
Test Your Knowledge
-
I can help an older adult who is grieving
by:
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Telling the person that feelings are not important and
that he or she should just think about something else.
-
Asking the person to tell me about the loss (person,
object, or situation).
-
Reminding the person that we all get
old.
-
Making the person stay very busy.
Continue to Where to go from here
Return to Grief: Helping older adults with grief
Where to go from here
Now that you have read this
information, you are ready to help an older adult who is grieving.
Talk with a health professional
If
you have questions about this information, take it with you when you visit your
health professional. You may want to use a highlighter to mark areas or make
notes in the margins of the pages where you have questions.
If you would like more information on helping an older
adult who is grieving, the following resources are available:
Organizations
| National Hospice and Palliative Care
Organization |
| 1700 Diagonal Road |
|
Suite 625 |
| Alexandria, VA 22314 |
| Phone: | 1-800-658-8898 (703) 837-1500 |
| Fax: | (703) 837-1233 |
| E-mail: | nhpco_info@nhpco.org |
| Web Address: | www.nhpco.org |
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The U.S. National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO)
offers information on local hospice and palliative care programs across
America. NHPCO is committed to improving end-of-life care and expanding access
to hospice care with the goal of improving quality of life for dying people and
their loved ones.
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| Hospice Association of America |
| 228 Seventh Street SE |
| Washington, DC 20003 |
| Phone: | (202) 546-4759 |
| Fax: | (202) 547-9559 |
| Web Address: | www.nahc.org/haa |
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The Hospice Association of America (HAA) seeks to heighten the
public visibility of hospice services. HHA offers a number of helpful,
practical publications for people who are considering hospice, including
consumer guides, fact sheets, historical perspectives, and other background
information. The Web site offers information from the legislative, regulatory,
research, legal, and public relations departments, including "Hospice Facts and
Statistics."
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Support Group
| AARP (Association for the Advancement of Retired People) Grief and Loss |
| 601 E Street NW |
| Washington, DC 20049 |
| Phone: | 1-888-687-2277 |
| Web Address: | www.aarp.org/families/grief_loss |
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AARP is a national organization founded in 1973 to promote quality
of life for older people. The Web site on grief and loss includes community
resources offering support to people grieving the death of a loved one. The Web
site also has information on coping with the loss of a loved one and making
plans such as funeral arrangements and financial decisions after a person's
death.
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Return to Grief: Helping older adults with grief
Credits
| Author | Jeannette Curtis |
| Editor | Susan Van Houten, RN, BSN, MBA |
| Associate Editor | Tracy Landauer |
| Associate Editor | Pat Truman, MATC |
| Primary Medical Reviewer | Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Sidney Zisook, MD - Psychiatry |
| Last Updated | November 12, 2007 |
True
This answer is correct.
Older adults express their grief in the same
ways as other adults. However, they may experience several losses at the same
time.
False
This answer is incorrect.
Older adults express their grief in the same
ways as other adults. However, they may experience several losses at the same
time.
True
This answer is incorrect.
Older adults may not be very willing to tell
other people that they are grieving. They may not tell others that they are
grieving losses related to aging. And they may be unwilling to tell other
people how sad they feel when they see or care for older loved ones who are ill
or aging.
False
This answer is correct.
Older adults may not be very willing to tell
other people that they are grieving. They may not tell others that they are
grieving losses related to aging. And they may be unwilling to tell other
people how sad they feel when they see or care for older loved ones who are ill
or aging.
True
This answer is incorrect.
Older adults have a lot of experience with
loss, but they do not grieve less than other adults. Older adults are more
likely to develop unresolved grief or other conditions associated with grieving
than other adults.
False
This answer is correct.
Older adults have a lot of experience with
loss, but they do not grieve less than other adults. Older adults are more
likely to develop unresolved grief or other conditions associated with grieving
than other adults.
True
This answer is correct.
Older adults have a lot of experience with
loss, but they do not grieve less than other adults. Older adults are more
likely to become physically ill after a major loss.
False
This answer is incorrect.
Older adults have a lot of experience with
loss, but they do not grieve less than other adults. Older adults are more
likely to become physically ill after a major loss.
Telling the person that feelings are not important and
that he or she should just think about something else.
This answer is incorrect.
You cannot help an older adult who is grieving
by telling the person that feelings are not important and that he or she should
just think about something else. Asking the person to talk about his or her
loss often helps the person who is grieving. Older people, especially those who
have experienced several losses over a short period of time, are often helped
when they share memories of the lost person. The correct answer is b.
Asking the person to tell me about the loss (person,
object, or situation).
This answer is correct.
You can help an older adult who is grieving by
asking the person to tell you about the loss (person, object, or situation).
Older people, especially those who have experienced several losses over a short
period of time, are often helped when they share memories of the lost
person.
Reminding the person that we all get
old.
This answer is incorrect.
You cannot help an older adult who is grieving
by reminding the person that we all get old. Asking the person to talk about
his or her loss often helps the person who is grieving. Older people,
especially those who have experienced several losses over a short period of
time, are often helped when they share memories of the lost person. The correct
answer is b.
Making the person stay very busy.
This answer is incorrect.
You cannot help an older adult who is grieving
by making the person stay very busy. Asking the person to talk about his or her
loss often helps the person who is grieving. Older people, especially those who
have experienced several losses over a short period of time, are often helped
when they share memories of the lost person. The correct answer is b.
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| Author: | Jeannette Curtis | Last Updated: November 12, 2007 |
| Medical Review: | Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
Sidney Zisook, MD - Psychiatry |
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