Chart — Palliative & End-of-Life
Grief Types Comparison Chart
Exam questions hand you a grieving person and ask what kind of grief it is and what to do. The four types, their recognition cues, and the response each one calls for.
Educational use only. Function-impairing grief and any suicidal statements warrant professional mental-health referral and direct safety assessment. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
The Four Types
| Type | Definition | How to Recognize It | Nursing Response |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal (uncomplicated) | The expected, individual response to loss — emotional waves, fatigue, sleep/appetite changes, difficulty concentrating | Intensity gradually softens over months; the person stays connected to life and can function, even while hurting; transiently sensing the deceased can be normal | Presence, normalization ('what you're feeling is normal'), encourage support systems and rituals; no treatment needed |
| Anticipatory | Grieving that begins before the loss — during terminal illness, dementia, or awaiting a poor outcome | Family mourning a still-living patient; sadness, rehearsing the loss, withdrawing early or clinging; common in long illnesses ('the long goodbye') | Validate it as real grief; support continued connection with the patient; involve hospice/palliative support early |
| Complicated (prolonged) | Intense, function-impairing grief persisting well beyond cultural norms | Persistent yearning, inability to accept the death, life on hold months to years later, withdrawal, numbness that never lifts; risk ↑ with sudden/violent deaths, loss of a child, isolation | Refer for professional grief therapy; screen directly for suicidal ideation; this is the grief that needs treatment |
| Disenfranchised | Grief that society doesn't acknowledge or sanction, so support never arrives | Loss of an ex-spouse, secret partner, pregnancy loss, pet, patient (nurses' grief), death by stigma-laden cause the family hides | Name the loss as real and legitimate; create space to mourn; connect to communities that do acknowledge it |
The Stages Model — Status Report
Kübler-Ross’s five stages — denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance — describe common experiences, not a required sequence. People skip, repeat, and reorder; there is no failing grade for never reaching acceptance. Exams may ask you to label a stage (a bargaining statement, an anger outburst aimed at staff); they should never see you push a person “to the next stage.”
Exam Traps
- ✦Family grieving a dementia patient who is still alive = anticipatory grief.
- ✦A year of life-on-hold, can't-accept-it grief = complicated grief → professional referral.
- ✦Grief after miscarriage, an ex-spouse's death, or a patient's death = disenfranchised — the intervention is legitimizing the loss.
- ✦Anger directed at the nurse is grief, not a behavior problem — stay therapeutic, don't defend.
- ✦'I want to be with him' from a bereaved spouse → direct suicide assessment is the priority.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with National Consensus Project (NCP) Clinical Practice Guidelines · Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association (HPNA). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
