Lecture #9 Death Psych
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Transcript Lecture #9 Death Psych
Death & Dying
Attitudes & Stages
Based on the work of Dr. Kubler Ross
Attitudes towards Death
Death less familiar in 20th century due to
social & technological changes
life-extending technologies increases chances
of survival
also 80% of contemporary deaths take place
in hospitals, nursing homes and other formal
settings
death removed from everyday life
Attitudes towards Death
New attitude towards death has developed
i.e., death should be invisible
attitude referred to as death denied
attitude makes death private rather than public
denies mourning - grief expressed only privately
community life goes on as if nothing happened
includes funeral rites that erase signs of death
coffins become caskets
morticians beautify dead bodies
Impact of Attitude
Most people uncomfortable about death
confusing message to children about death
Dying people placed in formal setting, few
visitors
assign care to specialists
contact with death is routine & impersonal
leave definition of death to medical science
the dying often experience a social death
before their biological death
Impact of Attitude
Rather not use term die - prefer to use terms
such as pass away, no longer with us, gone
to heaven.
Caskets closed - do not view death
Children kept away from funerals and burials
Death Awareness Movement
Death awareness movement emerged in
70’s lack opportunities to learn about death.
Pushed into facing death & dying due to
contemporary social issues; abortion, AIDS,
drug abuse, & alcoholism.
Movement challenged isolation of dying,
promoted idea of the good death
dying person surrounded by family & friends
minimal technological interference
lead to development of death education.
The Dying Process
Research of Elizabeth Kubler-Ross has
influenced how we accept deaths.
Kubler-Ross worked within a psychoanalytic
framework
interviewed 200 dying patients
She proposed 5 distinct stages through which
individuals pass.
Kubler-Ross
Stages are distinct but not necessarily
progressive, likely to overlap
Denial is the 1st stage “Not me”
refusal to believe news of impending death
Anger 2nd stage - “Why me?”
anger likely to be displaced on caregivers
Bargaining is the 3rd stage - “Yes me but...”
- bargaining with a higher being for more time.
Kubler-Ross
Depression - 4th stage - “Yes me” - begin to
morn
acknowledges and mourns impending loss
represents natural grieving process of
separation from loved ones and life
Acceptance, the final stage, reached only if
individual allowed to express and work out
earlier feelings.
Conclusion
Lifelong Growth
growth is still possible for the dying person
apologies, regrets, forgiveness & to express love.
also need time for introspection, reminiscing &
affirming beliefs.
These tasks require growth & change