FAST FACTS AND CONCEPTS #43 Author(s): VJ Periyakoil MD
Background Distinguishing between a dying patient’s normal grief and a major depression is a part of routine care for patients near the end-of-life. This Fast Fact will review the definitions and clinical features that distinguish these conditions. See Fast Facts #7 and #32 for further discussions of depression in advanced cancer and an introduction to grief. Definitions
Distinguishing preparatory grief from depression
References
Fast Facts and Concepts are edited by Drew A. Rosielle MD, Palliative Care Center, Medical College of Wisconsin. For more information write to: drosiell@mcw.edu. More information, as well as the complete set of Fast Facts, are available at EPERC: www.eperc.mcw.edu.
Version History: This Fast Fact was originally edited by David E Weissman MD. 2nd Edition published August 2005. Current version re-copy-edited April 2009.
Copyright/Referencing Information: Users are free to download and distribute Fast Facts for educational purposes only. Periyakoil VJ. Is It Grief or Depression? 2nd Edition. Fast Facts and Concepts. August 2005; 43. Available at: http://www.eperc.mcw.edu/fastfact/ff_043.htm.
Disclaimer: Fast Facts and Concepts provide educational information. This information is not medical advice. Health care providers should exercise their own independent clinical judgment. Some Fast Facts cite the use of a product in a dosage, for an indication, or in a manner other than that recommended in the product labeling. Accordingly, the official prescribing information should be consulted before any such product is used.
ACGME Competencies: Medical Knowledge, Patient Care
Keyword(s): Psychosocial and Spiritual Experience: Patients, Families, and Clinicians