Description |
The purpose of this study was to generate a theory of helpfulness for the elderly bereaved, grounded in the data which were the responses of the bereaved research participants concerning the following issue: (a) the advice they would give to others who have lost a spouse, (b) how others are helpful, (c) what kind of help is most appreciated, (d) how others can be more helpful and (e) who the most helpful person was during bereavement. Thirty elderly bereaved in the sample responded to the questions during tape-recorded interviews in their homes 3-4 week, 2 months, 6 months, 1 year, 18 months, and 2 years following the death of their spouses. These participants were interviewed as part of a larger research project, "Bereavement in the Elderly: Factors of Adaptation." Which was funded by the National Institute of Aging (Grant No. R01 AG 02193). The content analysis of the interview data were the basis of the theory: "An Invitation to a New Live." The intercoder reliability was 89%. The findings and the theory were validated by the research participants. "An Invitation to a New Life" is a dialectical theory. On the on hand, the bereaved person alone can invite the self to a new life without a spouse. On the other hand, without others, the invitation is only partial and virtually withheld from the bereaved. It is anticipated that the theory will be useful to professionals involved in providing bereavement care, as well as to elderly bereaved persons, their families, and their friends. |