Community-based counseling reaches and helps bereaved people living in low-income households
Publication date
2019
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Poverty is related to increased grief-related mental health problems, leading some to suggest bereavement counseling should be tailored to income. However, information about accessibility and effectiveness of such counseling programs serving low-income households is scarce. This longitudinal study therefore investigated the association between poverty and complicated grief (CG), and the effectiveness of a community-based bereavement counseling program in serving low-income households. METHODS: Two hundred eighty-eight participants (75% female) were enrolled. Loss-related and demographic variables were assessed at baseline. Regression analyses were used to investigate household income as a predictor of CG, and examine bereavement counseling effectiveness by comparing CG symptom change across three household income categories across three time-points: baseline (T1), T1 + 12 months (T2), and T1 + 18 months (T3). RESULTS: Of all participants, 35.8% reported below poverty-threshold income, twice the general population's rate. Multiple regression analysis indicated poverty-threshold income was a predictor of CG symptoms over and above demographic and loss-related characteristics. Three-way interaction analysis detected a significant treatment effect for study condition across time, but no differences in treatment effects across income. CONCLUSION: Lower household income was associated with higher CG symptoms. Since income did not predict differential treatment response, community-based bereavement counseling appeared no less efficacious for members of low-income households.
Keywords
bereavement, counseling, effectiveness, grief, poverty
Citation
Newsom, C, Stroebe, M S, Schut, H, Wilson, S, Birrell, J, Moerbeek, M & Eisma, M C 2019, 'Community-based counseling reaches and helps bereaved people living in low-income households', Psychotherapy Research, vol. 29, no. 4, pp. 479-491. https://doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2017.1377359