Mental health consequences following the loss of a family member during the Corona pandemic

1000 4x3 Rear View Woman Sitting Bench Against Sky

Approximately 120 000-180 000 Swedes lost a family member due to COVID-19. Moreover, about ten times more individuals lost a family member to other causes during the pandemic. With pandemic restrictions, bereavement during the pandemic could be particularly challenging, thereby amplifying its adverse mental health consequences. The mental health consequences and related sick leave following bereavement during the pandemic and the pandemic-specific circumstances and experiences contributing to these adverse outcomes remain unclear.

This project will use mixed methods combining quantitative and qualitative approaches. In quantitative analyses, the project aims to evaluate the impact of bereavement on mental health using longitudinal data from Swedish nationwide total-population social and health registers. It will compare bereavement during the pandemic to before the pandemic, in different phases of the pandemic, bereavement due to COVID-19 to other causes of death, and in different population groups.

Meanwhile, the project will use qualitative interviews to explore further and identify the pandemic-related circumstances and experiences of people bereaved during the pandemic that may have contributed to adverse mental health outcomes.

The project will provide up-to-date information on bereavement’s health and social consequences. It will generate human-centred policy-relevant knowledge, which can reduce the negative impacts of bereavement in the pandemic and guide policy actions in future health crises.

Project information

Project members
  • Mikael Rostila, Principal Investigator
  • Lisa Berg
  • Rachel Eklund
  • Alessandra Grotta
  • Ayako Hiroshi
  • Can Liu
  • Josefin Sveen
Project period

2023 – 2025

Project funder

Swedish Research Council

Publications

  1. Rogne, S., Grotta, A., Liu, C., Berg, L., Saarela, J., Kawachi, I., . . . Rostila, M. (2025). All-cause mortality around the anniversary of a sibling’s death: findings from Swedish National Register Data. American Journal of Epidemiology, kwaf213.
  2. Rostila, M. (2025). Den dolda sorgen. Hälsokonsekvenser vid anhörigförlust. Natur & Kultur, Stockholm.
  3. Ripamonti, E., Rostila, M., & Saarela, J. (2024). Bereavement due to child loss, divorce, and depressive mood in older age across European welfare regimes. SSM-Population Health, 28, 101721.
  4. Chen, H., Janszky, I., Rostila, M., Wei, D., Yang, F., Li, J., László, K.D. (2023). Bereavement in childhood and young adulthood and the risk of atrial fibrillation: a population-based cohort study from Denmark and Sweden. BMC Medicine, 5;21(1):8.
  5. Grotta, A., Liu, C., Hiyoshi, A., Berg, L., Kawachi, I., Saarela, J., Rostila, M. (2023). Suicide around the anniversary of a parent’s death in Sweden. JAMA Network Open, 3;6(4):e236951.
  6. Hiyoshi, A., Rostila, M., Fall, K., Montgomery, S., Grotta, A. (2023). Caregiving and changes in health behavior. Social Science & Medicine, Apr;322:115830.
  7. Liu, C., Grotta, A., Hiyoshi, A., Berg, L., Wall-Wieler, E., Martikainen, P., Kawachi, I., Rostila, M.(2023). Parental death and initiation of antidepressant treatment in surviving children and youth: a national register-based matched cohort study. eClinicalMedicine, 8;60:102032.

Scroll to Top

Discover more from CHESS

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading