Further evaluation of the factor structure, prevalence, and concurrent validity of DSM-5 criteria for persistent complex bereavement disorder and ICD-11 criteria for prolonged grief disorder

Paul A. Boelen, Lonneke Lenferink, Geert E. Smid

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Abstract

Persistent complex bereavement disorder (PCBD) is a disorder of grief included in DSM-5. Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) is included in ICD-11. Few studies have evaluated and compared criteria-sets for DSM-5 PCBD and ICD-11
PGD. The current study explored and compared the dimensionality, prevalence rates, diagnostic agreement, concurrent validity, and socio-demographic and loss-related correlates of both criteria-sets. Self-reported data were
available from 551 bereaved individuals. Confirmatory factor analysis showed that for DSM-5 PCBD-symptoms, a three-factor model with distinct but correlated factors fit the data well; for ICD-11 PGD-symptoms a one-factor model yielded adequate fit. The prevalence of probable DSM-5 PCBD (8.2%) was significantly lower than ICD-11 PGD (19.2%). Both DSM-5 PCBD and ICD-11 PGD were significantly associated with concurrent overall grief and depression, and varied as a function of education and time since loss. ICD-11 PGD prevalence-rates went down and agreement with PCBD-caseness went up, when heightening the number of symptoms required for a ICD-11 PGD diagnosis. This study was limited by its reliance on self-reported data and grief-symptoms were derived from two scales. That notwithstanding, findings provide further evidence that differences exist between disturbed grief criteria in DSM-5 and ICD-11 that may negatively impact research and care.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)206-210
Number of pages5
JournalPsychiatry Research
Volume273
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar-2019

Keywords

  • COMPLICATED GRIEF
  • INVENTORY
  • VERSION

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