Psychology Research and Behavior Management (Dec 2023)

Enacted Stigma Influences Bereavement Coping Among Children Orphaned by Parental AIDS: A Longitudinal Study with Network Analysis

  • Chen C,
  • Wu Q,
  • Zhao J,
  • Zhao G,
  • Li X,
  • Du H,
  • Chi P

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 16
pp. 4949 – 4958

Abstract

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Chuqian Chen,1,* Qinglu Wu,2,* Junfeng Zhao,3 Guoxiang Zhao,4 Xiaoming Li,5 Hongfei Du,2 Peilian Chi6,7 1Department of Medical Humanities, Southeast University, Nanjing, Jiangsu, People’s Republic of China; 2Institute of Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Zhuhai, Guangdong, People’s Republic of China; 3Institute of Psychology and Behavior, Henan University, Kaifeng, Henan, People’s Republic of China; 4Department of Psychology, Henan Normal University, Xinxiang, Henan, People’s Republic of China; 5Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA; 6Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Macau, Macau, People’s Republic of China; 7Centre for Cognitive and Brain Sciences, University of Macau, Macau, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Peilian Chi, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Macau, Mailing: E21-3049, Macau, 999078, People’s Republic of China, Tel +853 8822-4025, Email [email protected]: The study aims to understand how enacted stigma influences bereavement coping at the style (scale) level and the specific pathways at the strategy (item) level.Methods: The longitudinal data of 755 children orphaned by parental Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) in rural China were used. Grief processing and deliberate grief avoidance were measured at wave 1 (baseline) and wave 2 (one-year follow-up) to reflect bereavement coping in the contexts of being with family members, being with friends, being with community members, and being alone. Enacted stigma that measured at wave 1 was used to assess the experienced stigma of these AIDS-orphaned children. Network analyses were run following regressions.Results: Controlling for demographics and baseline-level bereavement coping, multivariate regressions revealed that enacted stigma at wave 1 significantly predicted grief processing and deliberate grief avoidance at wave 2. Network analyses showed that, for grief processing, stigma increased searching for meaning alone and with friends and expressing feelings to community members, which then provoked the same strategy across contexts. Meanwhile, stigma triggered the deliberate grief avoidance network by initially suppressing the expression of feelings to community members.Conclusion: Enacted stigma contributes to bereavement coping. Stigma stirs up complex feelings but forces AIDS-orphaned children to suppress expressions, and it increases needs to process grief through meaning making but cuts supporting forces by promoting avoidance. Interventions are imperative to reduce stigma, improve emotion regulation, and facilitate meaning making for people bereaved by stigmatized deaths.Keywords: enacted stigma, bereavement coping, AIDS, orphans, network analysis, parental loss

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