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Ambiguous Loss and Embodied Grief Related to Mexican Migrant Disappearances.

Rebecca M CrockerRobin C ReinekeMaría Elena Ramos Tovar
Published in: Medical anthropology (2021)
Since the 1990s, thousands of Latin Americans have died or disappeared along the US-Mexico border, following the funneling of migration through remote desert regions. The families of missing migrants face long-term "ambiguous loss," a lived experience in which a loved one is physically absent but psychologically present. Mexican relatives of the missing in Arizona and Sonora report that these losses produce deep emotional suffering along a timeline - worrying about the crossing, learning of the disappearance, beginning to search, and finally, coping with the long-term impacts of unknowing. Close relatives experience embodied health effects including headaches, insomnia, anxiety, depression, and chronic disease.
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • depressive symptoms
  • social support
  • physical activity