Grief Counseling Certification Blog on Prolonged Grief Disorder

Prolonged Grief Disorder is a complication in the grieving process that prevents the person from adjusting to the loss.  It closely resembles depression but is slightly different and can cause as much mental and social turmoil in one’s life.  Unlike depression, prolonged grief has a definite source.

Prolonged Grief disorder is a complication in the grief process. Please also review AIHCP’s Grief Counseling Certification

 

The article, “The pain of prolonged grief disorder” by Allison McCook looks at what Prolonged Grief Disorder entails and the conditions that must be met to be diagnosed with it.  She states,

“Every human being will experience grief at some point in their lives — it’s a fundamental human experience. “I think it’s important to underscore that people are equipped to grieve, and for the most part people do it OK,” says Anthony Mancini, a psychological researcher at Pace University in Pleasantville, New York.  But some mourners are not OK. When my mother died, I developed what’s known as prolonged grief disorder (PGD), a different sort of grief that psychologists are just beginning to acknowledge and understand. People with PGD — sometimes called “complicated grief” — aren’t just struggling to “get over it.” They have a defined disorder”

To read the entire article, please click here

Complications in grief can occur and when they do, individuals sometimes need care and guidance from a licensed professional counselor.

Professional counselors can also become certified in Grief Counseling.  AIHCP offers a four year certification in Grief Counseling for qualified professionals.  The program is online and independent study.