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      Grief and mourning in schizophrenia.

      1 ,
      Psychiatry
      Guilford Publications

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          Abstract

          Depression and suicidality after first episode of psychosis are well-documented responses in patients with schizophrenia (Addington, Williams, Young, & Addington, 2004). The understanding of depression and suicidality has been increasingly refined through careful study. Researchers have identified a number of factors that may cause depression such as insight into the illness, feelings of loss and inferiority about the illness as a damaging life event, hopelessness about having a viable future with the illness and mourning for losses engendered by the illness. The authors argue that grief and mourning are not just an occasional reaction to the diagnosis of schizophrenia, but are a necessary part of coming to terms with having the illness. They offer three case examples, each of which illuminates a distinct way in which psychosis and mourning may be related--psychosis as a loss of former identity, psychosis as offering meaning and transformation, and psychosis as a way of coping with the inability to mourn. In their view, recovery depends on mourning illness-related losses, developing personal meaning for the illness, and moving forward with "usable insight" and new identity (Lewis, 2004) that reflects a new understanding of one's strengths and limitations with the illness.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Psychiatry
          Psychiatry
          Guilford Publications
          0033-2747
          0033-2747
          2007
          : 70
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, Wayne State University, USA. dwittman@med.wayne.edu
          Article
          10.1521/psyc.2007.70.2.154
          17661540
          7cfb13f8-39fd-4a4d-852c-75563c825e43
          History

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