The pain and relief of grief: Mental pain and mental pain acceptance associations with post-loss pathologies and growth among young widows and widowers.
Anat Bahat-YaacobySami HamdanPublished in: Death studies (2024)
Mental pain is a core symptom of bereavement, yet its study with grief pathologies is still scarce. Mental pain acceptance may also affect the associations between mental pain, grief pathologies, and post-loss growth (PLG). The current study aims to investigate the associations between mental pain, mental pain acceptance, and post-loss outcomes in a sample of young widow(er)s. 257 young Israeli widow(er)s completed questionnaires assessing mental pain, mental pain acceptance, depression, complicated grief (CG), suicidal risk and PLG. Paths analyses revealed that depression mediated the positive associations between mental pain and suicidal risk and CG, and mental pain acceptance moderated the positive association between mental pain and depression. Mental pain acceptance also moderated the negative association between mental pain and PLG. The study's findings highlight the crucial role of mental pain and mental pain acceptance in the associations between adverse and favorable post-loss outcomes among bereaved individuals.