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Wikipedia

Death anxiety

Death anxiety is anxiety caused by thoughts of one's own death, and is also known as thanatophobia (fear of death).[1] Individuals affected by this kind of anxiety experience challenges and adversities in many aspects of their lives.[2] Death anxiety is different from necrophobia, which refers to an irrational or disproportionate fear of dead bodies or of anything associated with death.[3] Death anxiety has been found to affect people of differing demographic groups as well, such as men versus women, young versus old, etc.[4] Different cultures can manifest aspects of death anxiety in differing degrees.[5]

Death anxiety
Other namesThanatophobia
An illustration from La Fontaine's fable "La Mort et le Mourant" depicting the Grim Reaper
SpecialtyClinical psychology, psychiatry

Psychotherapist Robert Langs (1928-2014) proposed three different causes of death anxiety: predatory, predator, and existential. In addition to his research, many theorists such as Sigmund Freud, Erik Erikson, and Ernest Becker have examined death anxiety and its impact on cognitive processing.

Anxiety caused by recent thought-content[6] about death is sometimes classified by a psychiatrist in a clinical setting as morbid or abnormal, or a combination of the two. This classification pre-necessitates a degree of anxiety which is persistent and which interferes with everyday functioning.[7][8] This high level of death anxiety in the elderly can cause lower ego integrity, and an increase in physical and psychological problems.[9]

Researchers have linked death anxiety with several mental-health conditions.[10] Common therapies that have been used to treat several mental-health conditions include psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. Users of these therapies explore the emotional processing and adaptations through patients' psychotherapy experience and how their mind is evolving to the emotionally affected experiences they have had in their life. Psychotherapies and psychoanalysis have been used to explore predatory death anxiety, as well as existential and predator death anxiety.[11]

One meta-analysis of psychological interventions targeting death anxiety showed that cognitive behavioral therapy can reduce death anxiety.[12]

Types edit

Robert Langs distinguishes three types of death anxiety: predatory death anxiety, predation or predator death anxiety, and existential death anxiety:[13][self-published source?][14]

Predatory death anxiety edit

People have death anxiety consciously and unconsciously. In the development of almost any emotional dysfunction concerns of death have a significant impact. [15] Predatory death anxiety arises from the fear of being harmed.[13][14][16][page needed] It is the oldest and most basic[17]: 615  form of death anxiety, with origins in the first unicellular organisms' set of adaptive resources. Unicellular organisms have receptors that have evolved to react to external dangers, along with self-protective, responsive mechanisms made to increase the likelihood of survival in the face of chemical and physical forms of attack or danger.[18] In humans, predatory death anxiety is evoked by a variety of dangerous situations that put one at risk or threaten one's survival.[17]: 617  Predatory death anxiety mobilizes an individual's adaptive resources and leads to a fight-or-flight response, consisting of active efforts to combat the danger or attempts to escape the threatening situation.[17]: 617 

Predation or predator edit

Predation or predator death anxiety is a form that arises when an individual harms another, physically and/or mentally. This form of death anxiety is often accompanied by unconscious guilt.[19][14][16][page needed] In Freudian theory, unconscious guilt is genetically embedded into people from their prehistory, religious upbringing, ancestral religious affiliation, and a person's personal ethics. The unconscious sense of guilt and its effect on the person are not unconscious but the idea or impulse that has undergone repression gives the rising feeling of guilt based on the disproportionate feelings.[20] This guilt, in turn, motivates and encourages a variety of self-made decisions and actions by the perpetrator of harm to others.[21]

Existential edit

Existential death anxiety stems from the basic knowledge that human life must end. Existential death anxiety is known to be the most powerful form of death anxiety.[22] It is said that language has created the basis for existential death anxiety through communicative and behavioral changes.[19] Other factors include an awareness of the distinction between self and others, a full sense of personal identity, and the ability to anticipate the future.[22] The existential psychiatrist Irvin Yalom asserts that humans are prone to death anxiety because "our existence is forever shadowed by the knowledge that we will grow, blossom, and inevitably, diminish and die."[23]

Human beings are the only living things that are truly aware of their own mortality and spend time pondering the meaning of life and death.[24] Awareness of human mortality arose some 150,000 years ago.[25] In that relatively short span of evolutionary time, humans have fashioned a single basic mechanism through which they deal with the existential death anxieties this awareness has evoked: denial.[25] Denial is effected through a wide range of mental mechanisms and physical actions, many of which go unrecognized.[22] While denial can be adaptive in limited use, excessive use is more common and is emotionally costly.[22] Denial is the root of such diverse actions as breaking rules, violating frames and boundaries, manic celebrations, directing violence against others, attempting to gain extraordinary wealth and power, and more.[25] These pursuits are often activated by a death-related trauma, and while they may lead to constructive actions, more often than not they lead to actions that are damaging to self and others.[25]

Theories edit

Thanatophobia edit

The term thanatophobia stems from Thanatos, the Greek representation of death.[citation needed] Sigmund Freud hypothesized that people express a fear of death as a disguise for a deeper source of concern. He asserted the unconscious does not deal with the passage of time or with negations, which do not calculate the amount of time left in one's life. Under the assumption that people do not believe in their own deaths, Freud speculated it was not death people feared. He postulated one does not fear death itself, because one has never died. He suspected death-related fears stem from unresolved childhood conflicts.[13][26][27]

Thanatophobia is not only death anxiety, but can mean an intense fear, and feelings of overall dread in relation to one's thinking about death. Usually it relates to one's personal death.[citation needed] Death anxiety can mean fear of death, fear of dying, fear of being alone, fear of the dying process, etc.[citation needed] Different people experience these fears in differing ways. Melanie Klein in 1948 states that humans are the only species that have a sense of what the limitations associated with life are, and because of this, death is a cause of anxiety.[citation needed] There continues to be confusion on whether death anxiety is a fear of death itself or a fear of the process of dying.[citation needed]

Those who are moving towards death will undergo a series of stages. In Kubhler-Ross's book On Death and Dying (1969), she describes these stages thus: 1) denial that death is soon to come, 2) resentful feelings towards those who will yet live, 3) bargaining with the idea of dying, 4) feeling depressive due to death being inescapable, 5) finally, acceptance.[28]

Wisdom: ego integrity vs. despair edit

Developmental psychologist Erik Erikson formulated the psychosocial theory that people progress through a series of crises as they grow older. The theory also proposes the concept that once an individual reaches the last stages of life, they reach the level he called "ego integrity". Ego integrity is marked by one coming to terms with both one's life and inevitable death and accepting it. It was also suggested that when a person reaches the stage of late adulthood, they become involved in a thorough overview of their life to date. When one can find meaning or purpose in one's life, one has reached the integrity stage. Conversely, when an individual views their life as a series of failed and missed opportunities, they do not reach the ego integrity stage. They instead experience despair; this variation of the stage is marked by feelings of disdain and unfulfillment. People who have attained the stage of ego integrity rather than despair are believed to exhibit less death anxiety.[13][26][27]

In a study performed in 2020, researchers tested to see if psychological need-based experiences affect their death attitudes and to see if ego integrity and despair greatly play a role in these death attitudes. The need-based experiences in this research study are the feelings of autonomy, relatedness, and competence. The researchers found that if the participants needs were satisfied, they would have higher ego integrity in relation to their attitude towards death. This allowed the participants to have an easier time accepting death. If the participants struggled to have their needs met, then they would experience higher despair in relation to death anxiety. This meant that they had more death anxiety overall.[29]

Terror management theory edit

Ernest Becker based his terror management theory (TMT) on existential views that added a new dimension to previous death anxiety theories. His theory states that death anxiety is not only real, but also people's most profound source of concern. He described the anxiety as so intense that it can generate fears and phobias of everyday lifelike fears of being alone, or in confined spaces. According to Becker, many everyday human behaviors consist of attempts to deny death and to keep anxiety under strict regulation.[26][27][30]

His theory suggests that as an individual develops mortality salience, or becomes more aware of the inevitability of death, they will instinctively try to suppress this thought out of fear. This behavior may range from simply thinking about death to the development of severe phobias and desperate behavior.[17]: 603 

Religiosity can play a role in death anxiety through the concept of fear. There are two major claims concerning the interplay of fear and religion: that fear motivates religious belief, and that religious belief mitigates fear.[31] From these, Ernest Becker and Bronislaw Malinowski developed what is called "terror management theory".[31] According to terror management theory, humans are aware of their own mortality which, in turn, produces intense existential anxiety. To cope with and ease the produced existential anxiety, humans will pursue either literal or symbolic immortality.[31] Religion often falls under the category of literal immortality, but at times, depending on the religion, can also provide both forms of immortality.[31] It is theorised that those who are either very low or very high in religiosity experience much lower levels of death anxiety, whereas those with a very moderate amount of religiosity experience the highest levels of death anxiety.[31] One of the major reasons that religiosity plays such a large role in terror management theory, as well as in similar theories, is the increase in existential death anxiety that people experience. Existential death anxiety is the belief that everything ceases after death; nothing continues on in any sense.[31] Seeing how people deeply fear such an absolute elimination of the self, they begin to gravitate toward religion which offers an escape from such a fate. In one specific meta-analysis study that was performed in 2016, it was shown that lower rates of death anxiety and general fear about dying were experienced by those who went day-to-day living their religion and abiding by its practices, compared to those who merely label themselves as members of a given religion, without living according to its doctrines and prescribed practices.[31]

A 2009 study with 135 participants on death anxiety in the context of religion showed that Christians scored lower for death anxiety than non-religious individuals, which supports the main tenets of terror management theory, that people pursue religion to avoid anxiety about death by finding comfort in the ideas about afterlife and immortality. Interestingly, the study also found that Muslims scored much higher than Christians and non-religious individuals for death anxiety. This finding is however not significant, because only 18 of the participants identified as Muslim. These findings do not support terror management theory, as the belief in an afterlife caused more anxiety for the Muslim participants than those with no belief in an afterlife. There is a need for further examination into TMT in the context of different religions/sects as well as the impact of varying beliefs about the afterlife on levels of death anxiety.[32]

Heidegger's being-for-death edit

The German philosopher Martin Heidegger wrote about death as something conclusively determined, in the sense that it is inevitable for every human being, while on the other hand, it unmasks its indeterminate nature via the truth that one never knows when or how death is going to come. Heidegger does not engage in speculation about whether being after death is possible. He argues that all human existence is embedded in time: past, present, future, and when considering the future, we encounter the notion of death. This then creates angst. Angst can create a clear understanding in one that death is a possible mode of existence, which Heidegger described as "clearing". Thus, angst can lead to a freedom about existence, but only if people can stop denying their mortality (as expressed in Heidegger's terminology as "stop denying being-for-death").[33]

The American philosopher Sidney Hook criticized Heidegger's view of death anxiety in his review of Heidegger's book Being and Time when it was translated into English in 1962.[34] Hook noted that for Heidegger, death anxiety "is a primordial anxiety, not something that waxes and wanes with changes in nature, history or society", and the anxiety is about "the possibility that one's existence may at any moment become finally impossible".[34] Hook argued that Heidegger's claims were wrong:

Now even when we become aware of this possibility, there is no evidence that we normally become anxious about it, unless the possibility is concretized and seems probable. Nor does Heidegger advance any reasons why we should be anxious. After all, because we cannot imagine ourselves dead, this hardly justifies the inference that our existence is necessary. What we know about human attitudes towards death indicates that Heidegger's generalization is false. Some men, and not only figures like Socrates and Spinoza, have no anxiety in the face of death. Men have believed that there are many things which could happen to them that are far worse than death. Any sensitive person can think of a variety of circumstances that would make death a happy release, almost a privilege.[34]

Meaning-management theory edit

Paul T. P. Wong's work on the meaning-management theory[35] (MMT) indicates that human reactions to death are complex, multifaceted and dynamic.[33] His "Death Attitude Profile" identifies three types of death acceptance as Neutral, Approach, and Escape acceptances.[36][37] Apart from acceptances, his work also represents different aspects of the meaning of death-fear that are rooted in the bases of death anxiety. The ten meanings he proposes are finality, uncertainty, annihilation, ultimate loss, life-flow disruption, leaving loved ones, pain and loneliness, prematurity and violence of death, failure of life-work completion, judgment- and retribution-centered.[35]

The psychological theory can also be seen[clarification needed] by peoples' need for survival as human beings. There are several meaning-related MMT propositions that can see how we try to meet our basic needs for survival and happiness.

1. Humans are bio-psychosocial-spiritual beings. People are programmed to want connection and seek transcendence. The significant impact of one's psychological mindset impacts how one makes coping mechanisms for stress, emotions, individual personality, and cognitive processes.[38] When a person has spiritual beliefs and values, their beliefs can help protect and facilitate against the fear and anxiety of death to lead to acceptance of death - potentially contrasting someone who does not have any holistic or religious beliefs.[39][40]

2. Human beings are meaning-seeking and meaning-making creatures. We live in a social world in which we construct meaning and purpose in our lives. Our progress and happiness largely depend on humans asking questions, thinking, imagining, telling stories, and using symbols to communicate ideas and experiences with others.[41] When we are actively engaging in the world and gaining life experiences, that can help us create unity and coherence in our life. MMT theorizes that the having the sense of belonging, purpose, and meaning can protect against the anxiety of death and can help us create feelings of personal internal control and self-independence.

3. Humans have two primary motivations: (a) to survive and (b) to find the meaning and reason for survival. The natural instinct for survival is instilled in every human being for fear of extinction. MMT postulates that when a person is given the ultimatum to live a life of suffering and turmoil, a person will get the internal self-initiative to seek for reasons to live in spite pain and suffering. Irvin D. Yalom suggests that the ability to embrace uncertainty is foundational but to posit knowledge is superior to ignorance. Navigating the complexities of life involves acknowledging the importance of embracing uncertainty and recognizing the value of informed understanding.[42]

4. Meaning can be found in all solutions. The growth and self-change that a person is capable of in spite of life turmoil and challenges helps people transform allowing self-transcendence and the ability to choose one's destiny. By viewing guilt as an opportunity for personal growth, and perceiving life transitions as a chance to take responsible action, one can navigate challenges with a positive and constructive mindset.[43] MMT predicts that when experiencing happiness and hope, even when faced with suffering and death, one is able to use the joy they feel to overcome and coexist with the fears of death.

5. The motivational tendencies of avoidance and approach may complement each other. Several motivation theories suggest that people's behavior is influenced by two distinct systems: approach system and avoidance system. The approach system guides behavior towards potential rewards, while the avoidance system regulates behavior to steer away from potential threats or punishments. People leaning toward an approach orientation tend to be more responsive to signals of potential rewards, whereas those favoring an avoidance orientation are typically more attuned to cues suggesting possible threats and punishments. [44] For example, when working towards and trying to achieve a goal the fear of failing can help push the desire to succeed even harder or can lead one to failure - depending on the mindset of the individual. MMT predicts that the increased motivation to live and die well is coupled with one avoiding death while creating goals to have a happy, healthy life. [45]

Existential theories edit

The existential approach, with theorists such as Rollo May and Viktor Frankl, views an individual's personality as being governed by continuous choices and decisions in relation to the realities of life and death.[46] Rollo May theorized that all humans are aware of the fact that they must one day die, reminiscent of the Latin adage memento mori. However, he also theorized that humans must find meaning in life, which led to his main theory on death anxiety: that all humans face the dichotomy of finding meaning in life, but also confronting the knowledge of approaching death. May believed that this dichotomy could lead to negative anxiety that hindered life, or a positive anxiety that would lead to a life full of meaning and living to one's fullest potential and opportunities.[47]

Other theories edit

Other theories on death anxiety were introduced in the late part of the twentieth century.[48] Another approach is the regret theory which was introduced by Adrian Tomer and Grafton Eliason.[48] The main focus of the theory is to target the way people evaluate the quality and/or worth of their lives.[48] The possibility of death usually makes people more anxious if they feel that they have not and cannot accomplish any positive task in the life that they are living.[48] Research has tried to unveil the factors that might influence the amount of anxiety people experience in life.[48]

Personal meanings of death edit

Humans develop meanings and associate them with objects and events in their environment which can provoke certain emotions. People tend to develop personal meanings of death which could be either positive or negative. If the formed meanings about death are positive, then the consequences of those meanings can be comforting (for example, ideas of a rippling effect[49] left on those still alive). If the formed meanings about death are negative, they can cause emotional turmoil. Depending on the certain meaning one has associated with death, positive or negative, the consequences will vary accordingly.[50] The meaning that individuals place on death is generally specific to them; whether negative or positive, and can be difficult to understand as an outside observer. However, through a phenomenological perspective, therapists can come to understand their individual perspective and assist them in framing that meaning of death in a healthy way.[51]

Religiosity edit

A 2012 study involving Christian and Muslim college-students from the US, Turkey, and Malaysia found that their religiosity correlated positively with an increased fear of death.[52]

In 2017, a literature review found that in the United States, both the very religious and the not-at-all religious enjoy a lower level of death anxiety and that a reduction is common with old age.[53]

In 2019, a study further examined the aspect of religiosity and how it relates to death and existential anxiety through the application of supernatural agency.[54] According to this particular study, existential anxiety relates to death anxiety through a mild level of preoccupation that is experienced concerning the impact of one's own life or existence in relation to its unforeseen end.[54] It is mentioned how supernatural agency exists independently on a different dimensional plane than the individual and, as a result, is seen as something that cannot be directly controlled.[54] Oftentimes, supernatural agency is equated with the desires of a higher power such as God or other major cosmic forces.[55] The inability for one to control supernatural agency triggers various psychological aspects that induce intense periods of experienced death or existential anxiety.  One of the psychological effects of supernatural agency that is triggered is an increased likelihood to attribute supernatural agency toward causality when dealing with natural phenomena.[55] Seeing how people have their own innate form of agency, the attribution of supernatural agency to human actions and decisions can be difficult. However, when it comes to natural causes and consequences where no other form of agency exists, it becomes much easier to make a supernatural attribution of causality.[56]

A study conducted among pilgrims at the Ardh Kumbh Mela in India discovered a link between strong religious beliefs, particularly in reincarnation, and reduced death anxiety among elderly Hindus.[57] The research found that while certain religious practices, like the Ganga snan (ritualistic bathing in the river Ganges), did not significantly affect death anxiety, a firm belief in life after death and finding meaning in life did.

Death acceptance and death anxiety edit

Researchers have also conducted surveys on how being able to accept one's inevitable death could have a positive effect on one's psychological well-being, or on one's level of individual distress. A research study conducted in 1974 attempted to set up a new type of scale to measure people's death acceptance, rather than their death anxiety. After administering a questionnaire with questions regarding the acceptance of death, the researchers found there was a low-negative correlation between acceptance of one's own death and anxiety about death; meaning that the more the participants accepted their own death, the less anxiety they felt.[58] While those who accept the fact of their own death will still feel some anxiety about it, this acceptance could allow them to form a more positive perspective on it.

People who are exposed to those who are near death or who have already died seem to have a paradigm shift in their way of thinking about death.[59]

A more recent longitudinal study asked cancer patients at different stages to fill out different questionnaires in order to rate their levels of death acceptance, general anxiety, demoralization, etc. The same surveys administered to the same people one year later showed that higher levels of death acceptance could predict lower levels of death anxiety in the participants.[60]

Death row phenomenon edit

The death row phenomenon is the distress and anxiety seen in inmates awaiting execution, which can cause an increased risk for suicidal tendencies and psychotic delusions. A contributing factor to this phenomenon is solitary confinement, lack of social interaction, as well as the psychological impact as a result of their crimes. One study collected data on death row suicides from 1978 to 2010 and found the rate of death row suicides to be higher than suicides in the male prison population as well as males in society, regardless of the increase in supervision of death row inmates.[61]

In a review of international law, there have been arguments made that support the idea of death row being a violation of human rights. In the past, executions have occurred hours or days after a sentence to death was received. However, in the United States, it can take up to, or more than, 10 years for a prisoner to see their day of execution. This time is spent in an area of a prison known as death row, where inmates are typically in their cells for up to 23 hours each day and have limited interaction with others. This, combined with the extensive time they wait for their day of execution, might correlate with the symptoms of psychological and physical deterioration increasing among those imprisoned on death row.[62]

Children edit

Death anxiety typically begins in childhood.[63] The earliest documentation of the fear of death has been found in children as young as age 5.[64][63] Psychological measures and reaction times were used to measure fear of death in young children. Recent studies that assess fear of death in children use questionnaire rating scales.[64] There are many tests to study this including The Death Anxiety Scale for Children (DASC) developed by Schell and Seefeldt.[64] However the most common version of this test is the revised Fear Survey Schedule for Children (FSSC-R).[64] The FSSC-R describes specific fearful stimuli and children are asked to rate the degree to which the scenario/item makes them anxious or fearful.[64] The most recent version of the FSSC-R presents the scenarios in a pictorial form to children as young as 4. It is called the Koala Fear Questionnaire (KFQ).[64] The fear studies show that children's fears can be grouped into five categories. One of these categories is death and danger.[64] This response was found amongst children age 4 to 6 on the KFQ, and from age 7 to 10.[64] Death is the most commonly feared item and remains the most commonly feared item throughout adolescence.[64]

A study of 90 children, aged 4–8, done by Virginia Slaughter and Maya Griffiths showed that a more mature understanding of the biological concept of death was correlated to a decreased fear of death. This may suggest that it is helpful to teach children about death (in a biological sense), in order to alleviate the fear.[64]

Relationship to adult attachment edit

Death anxiety refers to the fear of death and the unknown that comes with it. Adult attachment, on the other hand, refers to the emotional bond between two individuals, often romantic partners, that provides a sense of security and comfort. Research has shown that there is a complex relationship between death anxiety and adult attachment.[65]

According to the attachment theory, people exhibit different attachment patterns. Several studies have found that individuals who are more anxious about death tend to have less secure attachment styles. Insecure attachment styles are characterized by a fear of abandonment and a lack of trust in others, which can make it difficult for individuals to form close, supportive relationships. These individuals may also have difficulty coping with the idea of death, as they may feel a lack of support and security in their relationships.[66][67]

On the other hand, individuals who have more secure attachment styles tend to have lower levels of death anxiety. This may be because they feel more supported and connected to others, which can provide a sense of comfort and security when dealing with the idea of death.[68]

There is evidence that suggests increasing one's social curiosity, which plays a role in interpersonal relations, can reduce and subdue death anxiety. In the context of particular study, social curiosity and its tendency to foster social connection and relatedness with others acts as a form of symbolic immortality. Symbolic immortality is a conceptual model that can help reduce the fear of death.[69]

Sex edit

The connection between death anxiety and one's sex appears to be strong.[63] Studies show that females tend to have more death anxiety than males. In 1984, Thorson and Powell did a study to investigate this connection, and they sampled men and women from 16 years of age to over 60. The Death Anxiety Scale, and other scales such as the Collett-Lester Fear of Death Scale, showed higher mean scores for women than for men.[70] Moreover, researchers believe that age and culture could be major influences in why women score higher on death anxiety scales than men.[71]

Through the evolutionary period, a basic method was created to deal with death anxiety and also as a means of dealing with loss.[70][failed verification] Denial is used when memories or feelings are too painful to accept and are often rejected.[72][73][failed verification] By maintaining that the event never happened, rather than accepting it, allows an individual more time to work through the inevitable pain.[73] When a loved one dies in a family, denial is often implemented as a means to come to grips with the reality that the person is gone.[73] Closer families often deal with death better than when coping individually.[73] As society and families drift apart so does the time spent bereaving those who have died, which in turn leads to negative emotion and negativity towards death.[73] Mothers hold greater concerns about death due to their caring role within the family.[14] It is this common role of women that leads to greater death anxiety as it emphasize the 'importance to live' for her offspring.[14] Although it is common knowledge that all living creatures die, many people do not accept their own mortality, preferring not to accept that death is inevitable, and that they will one day die.[14]

Age and sex edit

Using the Collett-Lester Fear of Death scale, studies can be performed to examine the age and sex effects on death anxiety. In 2007, two studies were compared to support these claims and they discovered the evidence that was needed. The studies claim that death anxiety peaks in men and women when in their 20s, but after this group, sex plays a role in the path that one takes. Either sex can experience a decline in death concerns with age, but the studies show an unexpected second spike in women during their early 50s. Regardless of sex, once the age of 60 is reached death anxiety levels seem to decrease and stabilize to a low level.[74]

From a study done on elderly men and women in a care facility they were able to see that many older people were not as worried about what happens to their soul beyond death, but more, what they will have to go through in order to get to that process. In relation to their personal health/deterioration, self esteem, etc. From this study, it was also seen that women seem to be more concerned with others they will be leaving behind and the loss of those around them, in many cases even more-so than themselves.[75]

Another study that was performed on specifically black and white men and women over the age of 65 found that race and sex tend to not have the most effects on death anxiety in elderly age. The age of the individuals ended up being a greater predictor of death anxiety than the other two variables previously mentioned. Age was the greatest predictor in how much death anxiety women had, but not in men. This study also found that this difference in death anxiety between sexes may be caused due to the different ways men and women communicate with other people specifically about death.[76]

Measuring edit

There are many ways to measure death anxiety and fear.[77] In 1972, Katenbaum and Aeinsberg devised three propositions for this measurement.[77] From this start, the ideologies about death anxiety have been able to be recorded and their attributes listed.[77] Methods such as imagery tasks to simple questionnaires and apperception tests such as the Stroop test enable psychologists to adequately determine if a person is under stress due to death anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder.[77]

The Lester attitude death scale was developed in 1966 but not published until 1991 until its validity was established.[77] By measuring the general attitude towards death and also the inconsistencies with death attitudes, participants are scaled to their favorable value towards death.[77]

One systematic review of 21 self-report death anxiety measures found that many measures have problematic psychometric properties.[78]

 
Fear of COVID-19 during the pandemic

Death anxiety and COVID-19 edit

Millions[79] of people around the world have died from COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic presents a psychological stressor for pre-existent death anxiety fears. COVID-19 death anxiety was found to influence people's judgement throughout their lives.[80] In an Australian study, those who fear that they are more prone to contracting and dying from COVID-19 have higher levels of death anxiety. The study finds a positive correlation with death anxiety and general psychological disturbances such as depression, anxiety, stress, and paranoia.[81] Participants were also found to have greater fears of death from COVID-19 (average 22%) than the Australian fatality case rate (2%).[82] Elderly individuals, who were already likely to experience death anxiety outside of a pandemic situation, now find their fear of death largely exacerbated.[83] The fear of dying from COVID-19 has also been one of the leading factors in psychological distress among many countries during the course of the pandemic. It has particularly affected women and those with a lower level of education.[84] During the COVID-19 pandemic, death anxiety has been a large contributor to declining mental wellbeing among those working in helping professions such as nursing and social work.[85]

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ "Definition of necrophobia". Dictionary.com. Retrieved 2021-11-15.
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  6. ^ Combs, Heidi. "Mental Status Exam" (PDF). University of Washington. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
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Bibliography edit

  • Craddock, Nick; Mynors-Wallis, Laurence (2014). "Psychiatric diagnosis: Impersonal, imperfect and important". British Journal of Psychiatry. 204 (2): 93–95. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.113.133090. PMID 24493652.

death, anxiety, fear, death, redirects, here, heidecker, album, fear, death, fear, dying, redirects, here, alison, wonderland, song, alison, wonderland, discography, jack, jill, song, clear, hearts, grey, flowers, thanatophobia, redirects, here, other, uses, t. Fear of death redirects here For the Tim Heidecker album see Fear of Death Fear of dying redirects here For the Alison Wonderland song see Alison Wonderland Discography For the Jack Off Jill song see Clear Hearts Grey Flowers Thanatophobia redirects here For other uses see Thanatophobia disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs more reliable medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources Please review the contents of the article and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Death anxiety news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 This article may contain citations that do not verify the text Please check for citation inaccuracies January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Death anxiety is anxiety caused by thoughts of one s own death and is also known as thanatophobia fear of death 1 Individuals affected by this kind of anxiety experience challenges and adversities in many aspects of their lives 2 Death anxiety is different from necrophobia which refers to an irrational or disproportionate fear of dead bodies or of anything associated with death 3 Death anxiety has been found to affect people of differing demographic groups as well such as men versus women young versus old etc 4 Different cultures can manifest aspects of death anxiety in differing degrees 5 Death anxietyOther namesThanatophobiaAn illustration from La Fontaine s fable La Mort et le Mourant depicting the Grim ReaperSpecialtyClinical psychology psychiatryPsychotherapist Robert Langs 1928 2014 proposed three different causes of death anxiety predatory predator and existential In addition to his research many theorists such as Sigmund Freud Erik Erikson and Ernest Becker have examined death anxiety and its impact on cognitive processing Anxiety caused by recent thought content 6 about death is sometimes classified by a psychiatrist in a clinical setting as morbid or abnormal or a combination of the two This classification pre necessitates a degree of anxiety which is persistent and which interferes with everyday functioning 7 8 This high level of death anxiety in the elderly can cause lower ego integrity and an increase in physical and psychological problems 9 Researchers have linked death anxiety with several mental health conditions 10 Common therapies that have been used to treat several mental health conditions include psychotherapy and psychoanalysis Users of these therapies explore the emotional processing and adaptations through patients psychotherapy experience and how their mind is evolving to the emotionally affected experiences they have had in their life Psychotherapies and psychoanalysis have been used to explore predatory death anxiety as well as existential and predator death anxiety 11 One meta analysis of psychological interventions targeting death anxiety showed that cognitive behavioral therapy can reduce death anxiety 12 Contents 1 Types 1 1 Predatory death anxiety 1 2 Predation or predator 1 3 Existential 2 Theories 2 1 Thanatophobia 2 2 Wisdom ego integrity vs despair 2 3 Terror management theory 2 4 Heidegger s being for death 2 5 Meaning management theory 2 6 Existential theories 2 7 Other theories 2 8 Personal meanings of death 2 9 Religiosity 3 Death acceptance and death anxiety 4 Death row phenomenon 5 Children 6 Relationship to adult attachment 7 Sex 8 Age and sex 9 Measuring 10 Death anxiety and COVID 19 11 See also 12 References 13 BibliographyTypes editRobert Langs distinguishes three types of death anxiety predatory death anxiety predation or predator death anxiety and existential death anxiety 13 self published source 14 Predatory death anxiety edit People have death anxiety consciously and unconsciously In the development of almost any emotional dysfunction concerns of death have a significant impact 15 Predatory death anxiety arises from the fear of being harmed 13 14 16 page needed It is the oldest and most basic 17 615 form of death anxiety with origins in the first unicellular organisms set of adaptive resources Unicellular organisms have receptors that have evolved to react to external dangers along with self protective responsive mechanisms made to increase the likelihood of survival in the face of chemical and physical forms of attack or danger 18 In humans predatory death anxiety is evoked by a variety of dangerous situations that put one at risk or threaten one s survival 17 617 Predatory death anxiety mobilizes an individual s adaptive resources and leads to a fight or flight response consisting of active efforts to combat the danger or attempts to escape the threatening situation 17 617 Predation or predator edit Predation or predator death anxiety is a form that arises when an individual harms another physically and or mentally This form of death anxiety is often accompanied by unconscious guilt 19 14 16 page needed In Freudian theory unconscious guilt is genetically embedded into people from their prehistory religious upbringing ancestral religious affiliation and a person s personal ethics The unconscious sense of guilt and its effect on the person are not unconscious but the idea or impulse that has undergone repression gives the rising feeling of guilt based on the disproportionate feelings 20 This guilt in turn motivates and encourages a variety of self made decisions and actions by the perpetrator of harm to others 21 Existential edit Existential death anxiety stems from the basic knowledge that human life must end Existential death anxiety is known to be the most powerful form of death anxiety 22 It is said that language has created the basis for existential death anxiety through communicative and behavioral changes 19 Other factors include an awareness of the distinction between self and others a full sense of personal identity and the ability to anticipate the future 22 The existential psychiatrist Irvin Yalom asserts that humans are prone to death anxiety because our existence is forever shadowed by the knowledge that we will grow blossom and inevitably diminish and die 23 Human beings are the only living things that are truly aware of their own mortality and spend time pondering the meaning of life and death 24 Awareness of human mortality arose some 150 000 years ago 25 In that relatively short span of evolutionary time humans have fashioned a single basic mechanism through which they deal with the existential death anxieties this awareness has evoked denial 25 Denial is effected through a wide range of mental mechanisms and physical actions many of which go unrecognized 22 While denial can be adaptive in limited use excessive use is more common and is emotionally costly 22 Denial is the root of such diverse actions as breaking rules violating frames and boundaries manic celebrations directing violence against others attempting to gain extraordinary wealth and power and more 25 These pursuits are often activated by a death related trauma and while they may lead to constructive actions more often than not they lead to actions that are damaging to self and others 25 Theories editThanatophobia edit The term thanatophobia stems from Thanatos the Greek representation of death citation needed Sigmund Freud hypothesized that people express a fear of death as a disguise for a deeper source of concern He asserted the unconscious does not deal with the passage of time or with negations which do not calculate the amount of time left in one s life Under the assumption that people do not believe in their own deaths Freud speculated it was not death people feared He postulated one does not fear death itself because one has never died He suspected death related fears stem from unresolved childhood conflicts 13 26 27 Thanatophobia is not only death anxiety but can mean an intense fear and feelings of overall dread in relation to one s thinking about death Usually it relates to one s personal death citation needed Death anxiety can mean fear of death fear of dying fear of being alone fear of the dying process etc citation needed Different people experience these fears in differing ways Melanie Klein in 1948 states that humans are the only species that have a sense of what the limitations associated with life are and because of this death is a cause of anxiety citation needed There continues to be confusion on whether death anxiety is a fear of death itself or a fear of the process of dying citation needed Those who are moving towards death will undergo a series of stages In Kubhler Ross s book On Death and Dying 1969 she describes these stages thus 1 denial that death is soon to come 2 resentful feelings towards those who will yet live 3 bargaining with the idea of dying 4 feeling depressive due to death being inescapable 5 finally acceptance 28 Wisdom ego integrity vs despair edit Developmental psychologist Erik Erikson formulated the psychosocial theory that people progress through a series of crises as they grow older The theory also proposes the concept that once an individual reaches the last stages of life they reach the level he called ego integrity Ego integrity is marked by one coming to terms with both one s life and inevitable death and accepting it It was also suggested that when a person reaches the stage of late adulthood they become involved in a thorough overview of their life to date When one can find meaning or purpose in one s life one has reached the integrity stage Conversely when an individual views their life as a series of failed and missed opportunities they do not reach the ego integrity stage They instead experience despair this variation of the stage is marked by feelings of disdain and unfulfillment People who have attained the stage of ego integrity rather than despair are believed to exhibit less death anxiety 13 26 27 In a study performed in 2020 researchers tested to see if psychological need based experiences affect their death attitudes and to see if ego integrity and despair greatly play a role in these death attitudes The need based experiences in this research study are the feelings of autonomy relatedness and competence The researchers found that if the participants needs were satisfied they would have higher ego integrity in relation to their attitude towards death This allowed the participants to have an easier time accepting death If the participants struggled to have their needs met then they would experience higher despair in relation to death anxiety This meant that they had more death anxiety overall 29 Terror management theory edit Main article Terror management theory Ernest Becker based his terror management theory TMT on existential views that added a new dimension to previous death anxiety theories His theory states that death anxiety is not only real but also people s most profound source of concern He described the anxiety as so intense that it can generate fears and phobias of everyday lifelike fears of being alone or in confined spaces According to Becker many everyday human behaviors consist of attempts to deny death and to keep anxiety under strict regulation 26 27 30 His theory suggests that as an individual develops mortality salience or becomes more aware of the inevitability of death they will instinctively try to suppress this thought out of fear This behavior may range from simply thinking about death to the development of severe phobias and desperate behavior 17 603 Religiosity can play a role in death anxiety through the concept of fear There are two major claims concerning the interplay of fear and religion that fear motivates religious belief and that religious belief mitigates fear 31 From these Ernest Becker and Bronislaw Malinowski developed what is called terror management theory 31 According to terror management theory humans are aware of their own mortality which in turn produces intense existential anxiety To cope with and ease the produced existential anxiety humans will pursue either literal or symbolic immortality 31 Religion often falls under the category of literal immortality but at times depending on the religion can also provide both forms of immortality 31 It is theorised that those who are either very low or very high in religiosity experience much lower levels of death anxiety whereas those with a very moderate amount of religiosity experience the highest levels of death anxiety 31 One of the major reasons that religiosity plays such a large role in terror management theory as well as in similar theories is the increase in existential death anxiety that people experience Existential death anxiety is the belief that everything ceases after death nothing continues on in any sense 31 Seeing how people deeply fear such an absolute elimination of the self they begin to gravitate toward religion which offers an escape from such a fate In one specific meta analysis study that was performed in 2016 it was shown that lower rates of death anxiety and general fear about dying were experienced by those who went day to day living their religion and abiding by its practices compared to those who merely label themselves as members of a given religion without living according to its doctrines and prescribed practices 31 A 2009 study with 135 participants on death anxiety in the context of religion showed that Christians scored lower for death anxiety than non religious individuals which supports the main tenets of terror management theory that people pursue religion to avoid anxiety about death by finding comfort in the ideas about afterlife and immortality Interestingly the study also found that Muslims scored much higher than Christians and non religious individuals for death anxiety This finding is however not significant because only 18 of the participants identified as Muslim These findings do not support terror management theory as the belief in an afterlife caused more anxiety for the Muslim participants than those with no belief in an afterlife There is a need for further examination into TMT in the context of different religions sects as well as the impact of varying beliefs about the afterlife on levels of death anxiety 32 Heidegger s being for death edit The German philosopher Martin Heidegger wrote about death as something conclusively determined in the sense that it is inevitable for every human being while on the other hand it unmasks its indeterminate nature via the truth that one never knows when or how death is going to come Heidegger does not engage in speculation about whether being after death is possible He argues that all human existence is embedded in time past present future and when considering the future we encounter the notion of death This then creates angst Angst can create a clear understanding in one that death is a possible mode of existence which Heidegger described as clearing Thus angst can lead to a freedom about existence but only if people can stop denying their mortality as expressed in Heidegger s terminology as stop denying being for death 33 The American philosopher Sidney Hook criticized Heidegger s view of death anxiety in his review of Heidegger s book Being and Time when it was translated into English in 1962 34 Hook noted that for Heidegger death anxiety is a primordial anxiety not something that waxes and wanes with changes in nature history or society and the anxiety is about the possibility that one s existence may at any moment become finally impossible 34 Hook argued that Heidegger s claims were wrong Now even when we become aware of this possibility there is no evidence that we normally become anxious about it unless the possibility is concretized and seems probable Nor does Heidegger advance any reasons why we should be anxious After all because we cannot imagine ourselves dead this hardly justifies the inference that our existence is necessary What we know about human attitudes towards death indicates that Heidegger s generalization is false Some men and not only figures like Socrates and Spinoza have no anxiety in the face of death Men have believed that there are many things which could happen to them that are far worse than death Any sensitive person can think of a variety of circumstances that would make death a happy release almost a privilege 34 Meaning management theory edit Paul T P Wong s work on the meaning management theory 35 MMT indicates that human reactions to death are complex multifaceted and dynamic 33 His Death Attitude Profile identifies three types of death acceptance as Neutral Approach and Escape acceptances 36 37 Apart from acceptances his work also represents different aspects of the meaning of death fear that are rooted in the bases of death anxiety The ten meanings he proposes are finality uncertainty annihilation ultimate loss life flow disruption leaving loved ones pain and loneliness prematurity and violence of death failure of life work completion judgment and retribution centered 35 The psychological theory can also be seen clarification needed by peoples need for survival as human beings There are several meaning related MMT propositions that can see how we try to meet our basic needs for survival and happiness 1 Humans are bio psychosocial spiritual beings People are programmed to want connection and seek transcendence The significant impact of one s psychological mindset impacts how one makes coping mechanisms for stress emotions individual personality and cognitive processes 38 When a person has spiritual beliefs and values their beliefs can help protect and facilitate against the fear and anxiety of death to lead to acceptance of death potentially contrasting someone who does not have any holistic or religious beliefs 39 40 2 Human beings are meaning seeking and meaning making creatures We live in a social world in which we construct meaning and purpose in our lives Our progress and happiness largely depend on humans asking questions thinking imagining telling stories and using symbols to communicate ideas and experiences with others 41 When we are actively engaging in the world and gaining life experiences that can help us create unity and coherence in our life MMT theorizes that the having the sense of belonging purpose and meaning can protect against the anxiety of death and can help us create feelings of personal internal control and self independence 3 Humans have two primary motivations a to survive and b to find the meaning and reason for survival The natural instinct for survival is instilled in every human being for fear of extinction MMT postulates that when a person is given the ultimatum to live a life of suffering and turmoil a person will get the internal self initiative to seek for reasons to live in spite pain and suffering Irvin D Yalom suggests that the ability to embrace uncertainty is foundational but to posit knowledge is superior to ignorance Navigating the complexities of life involves acknowledging the importance of embracing uncertainty and recognizing the value of informed understanding 42 4 Meaning can be found in all solutions The growth and self change that a person is capable of in spite of life turmoil and challenges helps people transform allowing self transcendence and the ability to choose one s destiny By viewing guilt as an opportunity for personal growth and perceiving life transitions as a chance to take responsible action one can navigate challenges with a positive and constructive mindset 43 MMT predicts that when experiencing happiness and hope even when faced with suffering and death one is able to use the joy they feel to overcome and coexist with the fears of death 5 The motivational tendencies of avoidance and approach may complement each other Several motivation theories suggest that people s behavior is influenced by two distinct systems approach system and avoidance system The approach system guides behavior towards potential rewards while the avoidance system regulates behavior to steer away from potential threats or punishments People leaning toward an approach orientation tend to be more responsive to signals of potential rewards whereas those favoring an avoidance orientation are typically more attuned to cues suggesting possible threats and punishments 44 For example when working towards and trying to achieve a goal the fear of failing can help push the desire to succeed even harder or can lead one to failure depending on the mindset of the individual MMT predicts that the increased motivation to live and die well is coupled with one avoiding death while creating goals to have a happy healthy life 45 Existential theories edit The existential approach with theorists such as Rollo May and Viktor Frankl views an individual s personality as being governed by continuous choices and decisions in relation to the realities of life and death 46 Rollo May theorized that all humans are aware of the fact that they must one day die reminiscent of the Latin adage memento mori However he also theorized that humans must find meaning in life which led to his main theory on death anxiety that all humans face the dichotomy of finding meaning in life but also confronting the knowledge of approaching death May believed that this dichotomy could lead to negative anxiety that hindered life or a positive anxiety that would lead to a life full of meaning and living to one s fullest potential and opportunities 47 Other theories edit Other theories on death anxiety were introduced in the late part of the twentieth century 48 Another approach is the regret theory which was introduced by Adrian Tomer and Grafton Eliason 48 The main focus of the theory is to target the way people evaluate the quality and or worth of their lives 48 The possibility of death usually makes people more anxious if they feel that they have not and cannot accomplish any positive task in the life that they are living 48 Research has tried to unveil the factors that might influence the amount of anxiety people experience in life 48 Personal meanings of death edit See also Meaning making Humans develop meanings and associate them with objects and events in their environment which can provoke certain emotions People tend to develop personal meanings of death which could be either positive or negative If the formed meanings about death are positive then the consequences of those meanings can be comforting for example ideas of a rippling effect 49 left on those still alive If the formed meanings about death are negative they can cause emotional turmoil Depending on the certain meaning one has associated with death positive or negative the consequences will vary accordingly 50 The meaning that individuals place on death is generally specific to them whether negative or positive and can be difficult to understand as an outside observer However through a phenomenological perspective therapists can come to understand their individual perspective and assist them in framing that meaning of death in a healthy way 51 Religiosity edit See also Religious views on death A 2012 study involving Christian and Muslim college students from the US Turkey and Malaysia found that their religiosity correlated positively with an increased fear of death 52 In 2017 a literature review found that in the United States both the very religious and the not at all religious enjoy a lower level of death anxiety and that a reduction is common with old age 53 In 2019 a study further examined the aspect of religiosity and how it relates to death and existential anxiety through the application of supernatural agency 54 According to this particular study existential anxiety relates to death anxiety through a mild level of preoccupation that is experienced concerning the impact of one s own life or existence in relation to its unforeseen end 54 It is mentioned how supernatural agency exists independently on a different dimensional plane than the individual and as a result is seen as something that cannot be directly controlled 54 Oftentimes supernatural agency is equated with the desires of a higher power such as God or other major cosmic forces 55 The inability for one to control supernatural agency triggers various psychological aspects that induce intense periods of experienced death or existential anxiety One of the psychological effects of supernatural agency that is triggered is an increased likelihood to attribute supernatural agency toward causality when dealing with natural phenomena 55 Seeing how people have their own innate form of agency the attribution of supernatural agency to human actions and decisions can be difficult However when it comes to natural causes and consequences where no other form of agency exists it becomes much easier to make a supernatural attribution of causality 56 A study conducted among pilgrims at the Ardh Kumbh Mela in India discovered a link between strong religious beliefs particularly in reincarnation and reduced death anxiety among elderly Hindus 57 The research found that while certain religious practices like the Ganga snan ritualistic bathing in the river Ganges did not significantly affect death anxiety a firm belief in life after death and finding meaning in life did Death acceptance and death anxiety editResearchers have also conducted surveys on how being able to accept one s inevitable death could have a positive effect on one s psychological well being or on one s level of individual distress A research study conducted in 1974 attempted to set up a new type of scale to measure people s death acceptance rather than their death anxiety After administering a questionnaire with questions regarding the acceptance of death the researchers found there was a low negative correlation between acceptance of one s own death and anxiety about death meaning that the more the participants accepted their own death the less anxiety they felt 58 While those who accept the fact of their own death will still feel some anxiety about it this acceptance could allow them to form a more positive perspective on it People who are exposed to those who are near death or who have already died seem to have a paradigm shift in their way of thinking about death 59 A more recent longitudinal study asked cancer patients at different stages to fill out different questionnaires in order to rate their levels of death acceptance general anxiety demoralization etc The same surveys administered to the same people one year later showed that higher levels of death acceptance could predict lower levels of death anxiety in the participants 60 Death row phenomenon editMain article Death row phenomenon The death row phenomenon is the distress and anxiety seen in inmates awaiting execution which can cause an increased risk for suicidal tendencies and psychotic delusions A contributing factor to this phenomenon is solitary confinement lack of social interaction as well as the psychological impact as a result of their crimes One study collected data on death row suicides from 1978 to 2010 and found the rate of death row suicides to be higher than suicides in the male prison population as well as males in society regardless of the increase in supervision of death row inmates 61 In a review of international law there have been arguments made that support the idea of death row being a violation of human rights In the past executions have occurred hours or days after a sentence to death was received However in the United States it can take up to or more than 10 years for a prisoner to see their day of execution This time is spent in an area of a prison known as death row where inmates are typically in their cells for up to 23 hours each day and have limited interaction with others This combined with the extensive time they wait for their day of execution might correlate with the symptoms of psychological and physical deterioration increasing among those imprisoned on death row 62 Children editDeath anxiety typically begins in childhood 63 The earliest documentation of the fear of death has been found in children as young as age 5 64 63 Psychological measures and reaction times were used to measure fear of death in young children Recent studies that assess fear of death in children use questionnaire rating scales 64 There are many tests to study this including The Death Anxiety Scale for Children DASC developed by Schell and Seefeldt 64 However the most common version of this test is the revised Fear Survey Schedule for Children FSSC R 64 The FSSC R describes specific fearful stimuli and children are asked to rate the degree to which the scenario item makes them anxious or fearful 64 The most recent version of the FSSC R presents the scenarios in a pictorial form to children as young as 4 It is called the Koala Fear Questionnaire KFQ 64 The fear studies show that children s fears can be grouped into five categories One of these categories is death and danger 64 This response was found amongst children age 4 to 6 on the KFQ and from age 7 to 10 64 Death is the most commonly feared item and remains the most commonly feared item throughout adolescence 64 A study of 90 children aged 4 8 done by Virginia Slaughter and Maya Griffiths showed that a more mature understanding of the biological concept of death was correlated to a decreased fear of death This may suggest that it is helpful to teach children about death in a biological sense in order to alleviate the fear 64 Relationship to adult attachment editDeath anxiety refers to the fear of death and the unknown that comes with it Adult attachment on the other hand refers to the emotional bond between two individuals often romantic partners that provides a sense of security and comfort Research has shown that there is a complex relationship between death anxiety and adult attachment 65 According to the attachment theory people exhibit different attachment patterns Several studies have found that individuals who are more anxious about death tend to have less secure attachment styles Insecure attachment styles are characterized by a fear of abandonment and a lack of trust in others which can make it difficult for individuals to form close supportive relationships These individuals may also have difficulty coping with the idea of death as they may feel a lack of support and security in their relationships 66 67 On the other hand individuals who have more secure attachment styles tend to have lower levels of death anxiety This may be because they feel more supported and connected to others which can provide a sense of comfort and security when dealing with the idea of death 68 There is evidence that suggests increasing one s social curiosity which plays a role in interpersonal relations can reduce and subdue death anxiety In the context of particular study social curiosity and its tendency to foster social connection and relatedness with others acts as a form of symbolic immortality Symbolic immortality is a conceptual model that can help reduce the fear of death 69 Sex editThe connection between death anxiety and one s sex appears to be strong 63 Studies show that females tend to have more death anxiety than males In 1984 Thorson and Powell did a study to investigate this connection and they sampled men and women from 16 years of age to over 60 The Death Anxiety Scale and other scales such as the Collett Lester Fear of Death Scale showed higher mean scores for women than for men 70 Moreover researchers believe that age and culture could be major influences in why women score higher on death anxiety scales than men 71 Through the evolutionary period a basic method was created to deal with death anxiety and also as a means of dealing with loss 70 failed verification Denial is used when memories or feelings are too painful to accept and are often rejected 72 73 failed verification By maintaining that the event never happened rather than accepting it allows an individual more time to work through the inevitable pain 73 When a loved one dies in a family denial is often implemented as a means to come to grips with the reality that the person is gone 73 Closer families often deal with death better than when coping individually 73 As society and families drift apart so does the time spent bereaving those who have died which in turn leads to negative emotion and negativity towards death 73 Mothers hold greater concerns about death due to their caring role within the family 14 It is this common role of women that leads to greater death anxiety as it emphasize the importance to live for her offspring 14 Although it is common knowledge that all living creatures die many people do not accept their own mortality preferring not to accept that death is inevitable and that they will one day die 14 Age and sex editUsing the Collett Lester Fear of Death scale studies can be performed to examine the age and sex effects on death anxiety In 2007 two studies were compared to support these claims and they discovered the evidence that was needed The studies claim that death anxiety peaks in men and women when in their 20s but after this group sex plays a role in the path that one takes Either sex can experience a decline in death concerns with age but the studies show an unexpected second spike in women during their early 50s Regardless of sex once the age of 60 is reached death anxiety levels seem to decrease and stabilize to a low level 74 From a study done on elderly men and women in a care facility they were able to see that many older people were not as worried about what happens to their soul beyond death but more what they will have to go through in order to get to that process In relation to their personal health deterioration self esteem etc From this study it was also seen that women seem to be more concerned with others they will be leaving behind and the loss of those around them in many cases even more so than themselves 75 Another study that was performed on specifically black and white men and women over the age of 65 found that race and sex tend to not have the most effects on death anxiety in elderly age The age of the individuals ended up being a greater predictor of death anxiety than the other two variables previously mentioned Age was the greatest predictor in how much death anxiety women had but not in men This study also found that this difference in death anxiety between sexes may be caused due to the different ways men and women communicate with other people specifically about death 76 Measuring editThere are many ways to measure death anxiety and fear 77 In 1972 Katenbaum and Aeinsberg devised three propositions for this measurement 77 From this start the ideologies about death anxiety have been able to be recorded and their attributes listed 77 Methods such as imagery tasks to simple questionnaires and apperception tests such as the Stroop test enable psychologists to adequately determine if a person is under stress due to death anxiety or post traumatic stress disorder 77 The Lester attitude death scale was developed in 1966 but not published until 1991 until its validity was established 77 By measuring the general attitude towards death and also the inconsistencies with death attitudes participants are scaled to their favorable value towards death 77 One systematic review of 21 self report death anxiety measures found that many measures have problematic psychometric properties 78 nbsp Fear of COVID 19 during the pandemicDeath anxiety and COVID 19 editMillions 79 of people around the world have died from COVID 19 during the COVID 19 pandemic The pandemic presents a psychological stressor for pre existent death anxiety fears COVID 19 death anxiety was found to influence people s judgement throughout their lives 80 In an Australian study those who fear that they are more prone to contracting and dying from COVID 19 have higher levels of death anxiety The study finds a positive correlation with death anxiety and general psychological disturbances such as depression anxiety stress and paranoia 81 Participants were also found to have greater fears of death from COVID 19 average 22 than the Australian fatality case rate 2 82 Elderly individuals who were already likely to experience death anxiety outside of a pandemic situation now find their fear of death largely exacerbated 83 The fear of dying from COVID 19 has also been one of the leading factors in psychological distress among many countries during the course of the pandemic It has particularly affected women and those with a lower level of education 84 During the COVID 19 pandemic death anxiety has been a large contributor to declining mental wellbeing among those working in helping professions such as nursing and social work 85 See also editHuman condition Melancholia Memento mori Mortality salience Psychological impact of terminal illness The Denial of DeathReferences edit Definition of thanatophobia Dictionary com Retrieved 2021 11 15 Thanatophobia Fear of Death my clevelandclinic org Definition of necrophobia Dictionary com Retrieved 2021 11 15 Mani Arash Fereidooni Reza Salehi Marzijarani Mohammad Ardekani Ali Sasannia Sarvin Habibi Pardis Zarei Leila Heydari Seyed Taghi Lankarani Kamran B July 2022 The prevalence and risk factors of death anxiety and fear of COVID 19 in an Iranian community A cross sectional study Health Science Reports 5 4 e706 doi 10 1002 hsr2 706 ISSN 2398 8835 PMC 9207499 PMID 35765604 Gire James T 10 July 2019 Cultural Variations in Perceptions of Aging In Keith Kenneth D ed Cross Cultural Psychology Contemporary Themes and Perspectives 2 ed Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons p 232 ISBN 9781119438403 Retrieved 6 April 2024 death anxiety is a multifaceted concept therefore differences may exist between cultural groups or ethnicities on different aspects of death anxiety Combs Heidi Mental Status Exam PDF University of Washington Retrieved 2017 06 05 Gold Liza H June 2014 DSM 5 and the Assessment of Functioning The World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2 0 WHODAS 2 0 Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law 42 2 173 181 PMID 24986344 Retrieved 2017 06 05 Anxiety Disorders Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5th ed American Psychiatric Association May 2013 doi 10 1176 appi books 9780890425596 dsm05 ISBN 9780890425558 V Fortner Robert A Neimeyer Barry June 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3390 bs11050061 ISSN 2076 328X PMC 8145862 PMID 33926098 Bibliography editCraddock Nick Mynors Wallis Laurence 2014 Psychiatric diagnosis Impersonal imperfect and important British Journal of Psychiatry 204 2 93 95 doi 10 1192 bjp bp 113 133090 PMID 24493652 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Death anxiety amp oldid 1217486392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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