




Phone Numbers
Directory assistance
(203) 688-4242
Patient information
(203) 688-4177
Adult emergency
(203) 688-2222
Children's emergency
(203) 688-3333
Admitting
(203) 688-2221
Children's admitting
(203) 688-3331
Psychiatric admitting
(203) 688-9907
Mailing address:
Yale-New Haven Hospital
20 York Street
New Haven, CT
06510-3202

|

|
Yale-New Haven Support Groups
Common reactions to trauma, grief and bereavement
- Shock
and denial. Feeling
numb, stunned and dazed are healthy and normal reactions. Often, it
is difficult to
“take in” information. The appetite may disappear. People often feel
completely exhausted, yet unable to sleep. The reverse may occur where
people sleep most of the time. Feelings may range from fear and anxiety
to guilt and depression. There are times some may feel they are going
crazy. It is healthy to express true feelings in this stage. Some
people find relief in crying and/or talking to others.
- Searching and yearning. During
this time, the bereaved search for what was lost. It is during this
period that the most bizarre behavior occurs. Guilt and anger are
often a part of this phase, as people search for answers. It is important
that the bereaved express feelings, including anger at Godif
they have those feelingsjealousy and other strong emotions.
They need not be ashamed of their feelingsanger turned inward
becomes guilt and this leads to depression.
- Disorientation and disorganization.
The appetite is poor, people lack motivation, have impaired judgment
and experience insomnia. As the bereaved struggle to be relieved of
disorientation there is a search to find the answer that feels right
to them. A listening ear is the greatest gift to the bereaved. Society
expects mourners to be healed quickly and support is often lacking
after a short time. Others tend to avoid talking about the person
who has died, when that is the thing that helps the bereaved most.
During disorientation the self-image is lowered and the mourner often
isolates himself/herself from others.
- Reorganization and restoration.
This phase does not occur quickly. Here people begin to sort out suspicions
and attempt to identify what was lost. There is a sense of release,
renewed energy, more socialization, better judgments and more stable
eating and sleeping habits. Readaptation to the loss does not mean
forgetting. Adults can begin to restore emotional well being by acknowledging
feelings, asking for support, reestablishing routines and reaching
out to others. They can care for the needs of children by listening
to their feelings and fears, providing information to clarify what
occurred and whether it can affect their lives and by reestablishing
routines that will comfort and reassure.
Complicating issues in sudden, unanticipated crisis or
death
Complicating issues associated with traumatization:
- The capacity to cope is diminished.
- The assumptive world is violently shattered.
- The loss does not make sense.
- The mourner experiences a profound loss of security and confidence in the world affecting all areas of life.
- Symptoms of acute grief and physical and emotional shock persist for a prolonged period of time.
Complicating issues associated with loss of a loved one under sudden and unanticipated circumstances:
- There is no chance to say goodbye and finish unfinished business with the deceased.
- Disbelief about the loss interferes with the mourner’s ability to come to grips with the reality of the death and its implications.
- The mourner obsessively reconstructs events in retrospect.
- The death stimulates an intense search for meaning and often the burning need to determine responsibility, affix blame and mete out punishment for the loss.
Related resources:
Points to keep in mind when dealing with children in
grief or trauma
- Children cannot sustain emotional pain for long period of time.
- Do not reject their emotions.
- Do not tell them how to feel or how not to feel.
- Allow the child to comfort you.
- Be patientthey may need to ask the same questions over and over.
- Maintain order and stability in the child’s life.
- Remember that children tend to idolize the dead. Help them gently regain balance and perspective.
Related resources:
Resources for grief
AARP Grief and Loss Programs
601 E. Street, NW
Washington, DC 20049
AARP Grief Support Line: (866) 797-2277 (toll free 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. EST daily)
GriefandLoss.org
Association for Death Education and Counseling
638 Prospect Avenue
Hartford, CT 06105
(860) 586-7503
www.adec.org/
GriefNet Support Groups
Rivendell Resources
PO Box 3272
Ann Arbor, MI 48106-3272
(313) 761-1960
www.rivendell.org/
WidowNet
E-mail: goshorn@fortnet.org
www.fortnet.org/WidowNet/
Last revised: July 30, 2007 (LMc)


|