Attachment Style in Adjustment to Conjugal Bereavement
- 1 June 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
- Vol. 18 (3) , 347-361
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0265407501183003
Abstract
This study examined the role of attachment style in adjustment to bereavement. Midlife bereaved individuals whose spouse had died in the previous year completed the Reciprocal Attachment Questionnaire (RAQ; West & Sheldon-Keller, 1994) and a measure assessing aspects of appraising and coping with the loss. They also were administered repeated symptom measures at 6, 14, 25, and 60 months post-bereavement. Complete symptom measures data over the course of the 5-year period were available for 32 participants. The RAQ compulsive care-seeking measure of anxious attachment was predictive of appraised inability to cope with the loss and of more severe symptomatology over the course of 5 years. Furthermore, appraised inability to cope with the loss was shown to mediate the relationship between compulsive care-seeking and symptoms. The RAQ compulsive self-reliance measure of avoidant attachment was not related to symptomatology, however. Finally, the RAQ angry withdrawal measure of ambivalent attachment was predictive of 6 and 14 months post-loss symptoms, but not of 25-or 60-month symptoms. The differences in the pattern of findings for compulsive care-seeking and angry withdrawal are discussed in the context of previous findings in the bereavement literature on the role of dependency and ambivalence in bereavement-related adjustment.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- SCOTT & WHITE GRIEF STUDY: AN EMPIRICAL TEST OF PREDICTORS OF INTENSIFIED MOURNINGDeath Studies, 1998
- When Marriage Breaks Up-Does Attachment Style Contribute to Coping and Mental Health?Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 1997
- When avoiding unpleasant emotions might not be such a bad thing: Verbal-autonomic response dissociation and midlife conjugal bereavement.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1995
- Personal Strivings, Daily Life Events, and Psychological and Physical Well‐BeingJournal of Personality, 1991
- Attachment styles among young adults: A test of a four-category model.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1991
- The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- Pathological grief and the activation of latent self-imagesAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1980
- Studies of Process-Outcome Correlations in Medical Care EvaluationsMedical Care, 1979
- Impact of Event Scale: A Measure of Subjective StressPsychosomatic Medicine, 1979
- The Making and Breaking of Affectional BondsThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1977