Meanings and processes that occur in a family particularly among adult children and widows, upon the death of an elderly parent, have broad implications for family life and bereavement issues. However, the relationship between a surviving parent and bereaved adult children, and among the adult children as siblings, has very rarely been studied. For this research, we will focus on the triad of relationships among the older surviving mother, a focal adult child, and the child's sibling, six to nine months after the death of an elderly father. To our knowledge, this will be the first qualitative study of adult children and parent (family) dynamics subsequent to the death of a first elderly parent. The focus of the study is on the cultural meaning and the processes of bereavement in families. A sample of 40 adult children (divided in half by gender) will serve as an entry point to the family. They will be recruited from newspaper death notices. We will also recruit the surviving widow and one sibling, if available. We will interview 2 or 3 persons in each family set , depending on eligibility and willingness of the widow and the sibling. In two qualitative, reflexive interviews, each family member will be interviewed about the impact of the death on themselves as well as its impact on other family members. Interviews will be transcribed and analysis will be aided by the use of Atlas.ti, as an indexing and analysis program. Analytical topics, themes and typologies will be developed from close coding of the material and from on-going, substantive research team discussions. The research will have important implications for the study of later life in understanding the impact of bereavement on the family, and for mental health and physical health professionals who provide care and support for individuals and families.

Public Health Relevance

This will be one of the first studies to examine the impact on the family of the death of the first parent, a father age 70 or older, and the meanings of the loss for children (siblings) and the surviving spouse. The proposed research will shed new light on an important stage of the family life course for older widows and adult children, and how their relationships may be affected by this loss. Findings about effects of bereavement and the potential need for care of the widow will have implications for the field of gerontology and for mental health and physical health professionals who provide support for bereaved family members. Research methods will be qualitative, primarily using ethnographic interviewing.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AG031806-02
Application #
7915630
Study Section
Community Influences on Health Behavior (CIHB)
Program Officer
Nielsen, Lisbeth
Project Start
2009-08-15
Project End
2012-07-31
Budget Start
2010-08-01
Budget End
2012-07-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$509,454
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Maryland Balt CO Campus
Department
Social Sciences
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
061364808
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21250
Moss, Miriam S; Moss, Sidney Z (2014) Widowhood in old age: viewed in a family context. J Aging Stud 29:98-106
Black, Helen K; Santanello, Holly R; Rubinstein, Robert L (2014) A pragmatic belief system in family meaning-making after death. Death Stud 38:522-30
Black, Helen K; Rubinstein, Robert L (2013) A death in the family: death as a Zen concept. Int J Aging Hum Dev 76:79-97
Moss, Miriam S; Moss, Sidney Z (2012) Meaning of the death of an elderly father: two sisters' perspectives. Omega (Westport) 66:195-213
Black, Helen K; Santanello, Holly R (2012) The salience of family worldview in mourning an elderly husband and father. Gerontologist 52:472-83
Moss, Miriam S; Moss, Sidney Z (2012) Multiple social contexts in qualitative bereavement research. J Aging Stud 26:459-66