Baltimore Sun Sunday

Researcher­s: For every virus death, nine relatives suffer

- By Kasra Zarei

PHILADELPH­IA — While it’s expected that deaths from COVID-19 will impair the health and well-being of surviving family members, the extent of the impact hasn’t been quantified.

Now, researcher­s at Pennsylvan­ia State University have calculated that each death from COVID-19 will affect approximat­ely nine surviving family members.

“It’s not just individual­s themselves who die (from COVID-19). People are connected to other people,” said Ashton Verdery, professor of sociology, demography and social data analytics at Penn State and lead author of the study. “We have a general sense that the pandemic has had a lot of effects on families compared to during periods of normal mortality levels, but there hasn’t been an estimate into how large the effect might be and the potential psychologi­cal impact.”

Verdery and his colleagues analyzed kinship networks — the system of relationsh­ips that make up an extended family — to determine the number of people who experience a death of a close relative due to COVID-19.

“Our goal was to understand for each death, what are the downstream implicatio­ns,” Verdery said. “Think about the number as a multiplier — instead of making a prediction of how many people will die, it (the multiplier) represents who many people will be bereaved.”

The COVID-19 bereavemen­t multiplier is a national estimate, and defines kin as grandparen­ts, parents, siblings, spouses and children. While the multiplier was about equal for Black and white Americans, this does not mean that the impacts of COVID-19 deaths will be the same. In Philadelph­ia, for instance, there are higher numbers of COVID-19 deaths among Black residents, meaning that more Black Americans will be bereaved.

There is also a concern that the large burden of family bereavemen­t may lead to a related wave of health challenges. Family members often rely on each other for social and emotional support, and many studies have shown that experienci­ng the death of a loved one or relative places an individual at greater risk for negative life stressors, worsened health and relationsh­ip strain. Additional­ly, unexpected deaths are more traumatic for individual­s compared with those that are expected.

Local hospital chaplains say the effect of COVID-19 deaths may be even higher due to the unusual intimate role health care workers played in the pandemic.

“With COVID-19, we had to do some stuff around the time of death that we never had to before,” said Jim Browning, chaplain and pastoral care director at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “Families were not allowed in the room, and we had to become surrogate family members.”

In many instances, he has counted at least nine people in the hospital affected by a COVID-19 patient’s death, including nurses who stood with patients as they took their last breath, and intensive care unit secretarie­s who called the families to tell them that it was time to said goodbye to loved ones on FaceTime.

The grief may take years to resolve, some say.

“I’ve never seen us so complicate­d in our grief and loss,” Browning said. “There are scars that are very deep that we’re not acknowledg­ing yet.”

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY ?? Family and friends attend the burial of Conrad Coleman Jr. on July 3 in Rye, New York.
JOHN MOORE/GETTY Family and friends attend the burial of Conrad Coleman Jr. on July 3 in Rye, New York.

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