Grief: Normal Mourning, Complicated Grief, and Prolonged Grief Disorder

Grief is the universal human response to loss. Most grief is not illness — it is a painful but natural process of integrating the reality of absence into a continuing life. In the DSM-5-TR, a specific diagnosis of prolonged grief disorder (PGD) was added in 2022 to describe grief that persists in severity and functional impact well beyond typical bereavement, affecting roughly 7 to 10 percent of bereaved adults. U.S. Surgeon General advisories in recent years have highlighted grief alongside loneliness as a major under-recognized public-health dimension of modern life.

This article describes normal grief, the distinction from depression and PTSD, the new PGD diagnosis, treatment options that work, and what ordinary support from friends, family, and communities looks like.

Table of Contents

  1. Normal Grief
  2. Beyond the “Five Stages”
  3. The Physical Health Impact
  4. Grief vs Depression
  5. Prolonged Grief Disorder
  6. Treatment
  7. What Helps (and Doesn’t) From Others
  8. Connections

Normal Grief

Most bereaved people experience intense waves of sadness, yearning, preoccupation with the deceased, disturbed sleep, loss of appetite, and functional impairment for weeks to months after the death. These waves gradually become less frequent and less incapacitating, and the grieving person re-engages with work, relationships, and meaning — while continuing to love and remember the person who died. Grief is not resolved so much as integrated. Acute intense phases typically last 6 to 12 months but yearly anniversary reactions are normal and can continue for life.

Beyond the “Five Stages”

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s five stages — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance — were originally observations of dying patients, not the bereaved, and were never intended as a sequential model. Modern grief research (George Bonanno’s work in particular) shows grief is highly variable. Common trajectories include resilient (majority) — significant distress early that attenuates, recovery — longer distress then attenuation, chronic — persistent severe distress, and delayed — relatively intact initially with later emergence of symptoms. No trajectory is wrong or right.

The Physical Health Impact

Grief vs Depression

Major depression and grief share many features but differ in important ways:

Prolonged Grief Disorder

DSM-5-TR criteria for prolonged grief disorder require:

Treatment

What Helps (and Doesn’t) From Others

Evidence-informed and clinically consistent:


Connections

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