Adjustment to the death of a sibling.
Open Access
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Archives of Disease in Childhood
- Vol. 61 (3) , 278-283
- https://doi.org/10.1136/adc.61.3.278
Abstract
Despite the recent increase in interest in terminally ill children and their families and the post death adjustment of parents, there has been little research examining the adjustment and self concept of surviving siblings in such families. This paper discusses the results of a preliminary descriptive study of 28 children (from 14 families) whose brother or sister had died of cancer between 18 and 30 months previously. Behaviour checklists were completed by parents and teachers and self concept scales administered to the children. A lengthy semistructured interview was carried out, and measures of parental adjustment were gathered. A high percentage of children were found to be exhibiting emotional or behavioural difficulties, or both, and the results indicated that low self esteem was common. Parental and child adjustment were not found to be related inter se, nor did they seem to relate to the child's self esteem. Thus for many children the loss of a sibling might cause long term distress. Further, many children who did not manifest overt difficulties perceived themselves unfavourably in comparison with either their ideal or their dead sibling.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The bereaved childPublished by Springer Nature ,1987
- CHRONIC ILLNESS: PSYCHOSOCIAL EFFECTS ON SIBLINGS—I. CHRONICALLY ILL BOYSJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1984
- Review: Research on handicapped children: sibling relationshipsChild: Care, Health and Development, 1981
- Children and death: Guidelines for grief workChild Psychiatry and Human Development, 1981
- Adaptation of siblings to childhood malignancyThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1979
- THE BEREAVED CHILDJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1978
- Psychiatric Disorder in the Young Adolescents of an Industrial TownThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1974
- The “replacement child”: A saga of unresolved parental griefThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1972
- A YOUNG BOY'S REACTION TO THE DEATH OF HIS SISTERJournal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 1969
- A SELF-CONCEPT SCALE FOR CHILDREN AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE CHILDREN'S FORM OF THE MANIFEST ANXIETY SCALE1Child Development, 1958