학술논문

Optimizing the clinical utility of four proposed criteria for a persistent and impairing grief disorder by emphasizing core, rather than associated symptoms
Document Type
article
Source
Psychological Medicine. 50(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Psychology
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Death
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
Family
Female
Grief
Humans
International Classification of Diseases
Male
Middle Aged
Military Personnel
Accidental death
bereavement
combat death
complicated grief
persistent complex bereavement disorder
prolonged grief disorder
psychiatric nosology
suicide
violent death
Neurosciences
Public Health and Health Services
Psychiatry
Clinical sciences
Biological psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundDistinguishing a disorder of persistent and impairing grief from normative grief allows clinicians to identify this often undetected and disabling condition. As four diagnostic criteria sets for a grief disorder have been proposed, their similarities and differences need to be elucidated.MethodsParticipants were family members bereaved by US military service death (N = 1732). We conducted analyses to assess the accuracy of each criteria set in identifying threshold cases (participants who endorsed baseline Inventory of Complicated Grief ⩾30 and Work and Social Adjustment Scale ⩾20) and excluding those below this threshold. We also calculated agreement among criteria sets by varying numbers of required associated symptoms.ResultsAll four criteria sets accurately excluded participants below our identified clinical threshold (i.e. correctly excluding 86-96% of those subthreshold), but they varied in identification of threshold cases (i.e. correctly identifying 47-82%). When the number of associated symptoms was held constant, criteria sets performed similarly. Accurate case identification was optimized when one or two associated symptoms were required. When employing optimized symptom numbers, pairwise agreements among criteria became correspondingly 'very good' (κ = 0.86-0.96).ConclusionsThe four proposed criteria sets describe a similar condition of persistent and impairing grief, but differ primarily in criteria restrictiveness. Diagnostic guidance for prolonged grief disorder in International Classification of Diseases, 11th Edition (ICD-11) functions well, whereas the criteria put forth in Section III of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) are unnecessarily restrictive.