Psychological and Physiological Responses following Repeated Peer Death
Judith Pizarro Andersen,
Roxane Cohen Silver,
Brandon Stewart,
Billie Koperwas and
Clemens Kirschbaum
PLOS ONE, 2013, vol. 8, issue 9, 1-9
Abstract:
Objective: Undergraduates at a university in the United States were exposed – directly and indirectly – to 14 peer deaths during one academic year. We examined how individual and social factors were associated with psychological (e.g., anxiety, depression, somatization) and physiological (i.e., cortisol) distress responses following this unexpected and repeated experience with loss. Method: Two to three months after the final peer death, respondents (N = 122, 61% female, 18–23 years, M = 20.13, SD = 1.14) reported prior adverse experiences, degree of closeness with the deceased, acute responses to the peer deaths, ongoing distress responses, social support, support seeking, and media viewing. A subset (n = 24) returned hair samples for evaluation of cortisol responses during the previous 3 months. Results: Ongoing psychological distress was associated with a) prior interpersonal trauma, b) fewer social supports, and c) media exposure to news of the deaths (p's 25 p/mg) compared to individuals with one or two prior bereavement experiences (who were, on average, within the normal range, 10 to 25 p/mg) (p
Date: 2013
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0075881
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075881
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