Risk of mental health conditions in bereavement: a population-based analysis of lung cancer spouses
Djin L. Tay, Kline Dubose, Jonathan Chipman, Lee Ellington, Malek Alnajar, Eli Iacob, Caroline Stephens, Katherine A. Ornstein

TL;DR
This study finds that spouses of lung cancer patients face increased mental health risks after their partner's death, especially if they had prior mental health issues.
Contribution
The study identifies multi-level risk factors for mental health conditions in bereaved spouses of lung cancer patients using population-based data.
Findings
Spouses with pre-existing mental health conditions had a 4.09 times higher risk of developing MHCs during bereavement.
Spouses of decedents with higher education and longer survival had lower MHC risk.
The study highlights the need for targeted bereavement support for high-risk subgroups.
Abstract
Caregiving to lung cancer patients is distressing, isolating, and associated with a high burden of anxiety and depression. However, few population-based studies in the U.S. have examined the risk of mental health conditions (MHCs) among spouses of lung cancer patients after the death of their partner. Guided by Anderson’s Behavioral Health Utilization model, we examined the role of sex, pre-bereavement MHC, and decedents’ healthcare utilization on the risk of having a diagnosed MHC after the death of a lung cancer patient. This retrospective cohort study linked state-wide health facility records of 1,224 dyads—deceased lung cancer patients and their bereaved spouses (824 female, 400 male)—in Utah between 2013 and 2021. Bereavement-related mood/stress-related conditions were identified for spouses using diagnostic codes (starting from day 1 following the patients’ deaths). The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGrief, Bereavement, and Mental Health · Family Support in Illness · Migration, Health and Trauma
