Advertisement第120回日本精神神経学会学術総会

Abstract

第117巻第8号

※会員以外の方で全文の閲覧をご希望される場合は、「電子書籍」にてご購入いただけます。
A Clinical Case of Grief Hallucination through the Mourning Work: Normal Grief and Spiritual Care
Isaku KUROTORI1,2, Satoshi KATO3
1 Department of Internal Medicine, Hokkaido Prefectural Haboro Hospital
2 Department of Psychiatry, Jichi Medical University
3 Oyama Fujimidai Hospital
Psychiatria et Neurologia Japonica 117: 601-606, 2015
Accepted in revised form: 12 March 2015.

 Auditory or visual hallucinations of a deceased person are well known in the normal course of the bereavement process. According to DSM-5, this symptom is included in the associated features supporting diagnosis of persistent complex bereavement disorder. In Japan, however, little is known about these hallucinatory experiences during grieving, and few reports on their prevalence are available. Here, we have reported a clinical case of such experiences following the loss of a spouse. A 66-year-old patient presented to the outpatient department with insomnia after her husband's death. She was preoccupied with a sense of loss and absolute loneliness. One day, she confessed to regularly encountering her husband's ghost at night; the ghost was distinguishable from a dream and provided the bereaved wife with some degree of comfort. The appearances lasted for 15 months and occurred several times a week without disturbing her social functioning. She gradually became aware that her husband was returning from the spirit world to give her solace. Her treatment was focused on resolving her conflicting feelings concerning her grief at his death and her relief at his no longer suffering from disease. While accepting her experiences, she started to review the days they spent together and appreciated his attachment. Therefore she completed the work of mourning and the ghost no longer appeared. One year after the departure of the ghost, she still attends the hospital regularly and there has been no recurrence. A reconstruction of her internal world leads us to conclude that the support of normal grief with such hallucinations prevents the intense experience of loss from generating pathological grief. Furthermore, we suggest reconsidering the importance of the mourning work and the inclusion of both the bereaved and deceased person in the medical context.
 <Authors' abstract>

Keywords:mourning work, bereavement, grief hallucination, pathological grief, spiritual care>
Advertisement

ページの先頭へ

Copyright © The Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology