Kübler-Ross, Elisabeth

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[[Image:Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926 - 2004).jpg|thumb|Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926 - 2004)]]
  
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'''Elisabeth Kübler-Ross''' (July 8, 1926 &ndash; August 24, 2004) was a [[Switzerland|Swiss]]-born [[psychiatrist]] and the author of the groundbreaking book ''On Death and Dying,'' where she first discussed what is now known as the Kübler-Ross model of the stages in dealing with [[grief]] and facing [[death]]. She graduated from the [[University of Zürich]] medical school in 1957. She moved to the [[United States]] in 1958 to work and continue her studies in [[New York]].
[[Image:kubler.jpg|thumb|Elisabeth Kübler-Ross]]
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'''Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, M.D.''' (July 8, 1926 &ndash; August 24, 2004) was a Swiss-born [[psychiatrist]] and the author of the groundbreaking book ''[[On Death and Dying]]'', where she first discussed what is now known as the [[Kübler-Ross model]].
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Interest in death as a transition into a higher state of consciousness moved from the realm of the solely religious when psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross caused physicians, psychiatrists, and scientists to take a new look at the meaning of death. [[Knowledge]] and understanding of the [[afterlife]] can help many overcome [[fear]] and [[pain]] when making preparations for their own death, or for that of someone they love. Understanding can help tremendously with the grieving or separation process. Kübler-Ross also believed that her research on death and dying revealed important lessons for living—to learn unconditional [[love]] and to fulfill life's purpose, which is service to others.
Kübler-Ross was born in [[Zürich]], [[Switzerland]], one of a set of identical [[multiple birth|triplet]]s. <ref>Newman, Laura. [http://www.bmj.com/cgi/reprint/329/7466/627.pdf Elisabeth Kübler-Ross]. (2004). ''British Medical Journal, 329 (7466),''  627. Retrieved November 17, 2006.</ref> She graduated from the [[University of Zürich]] medical school in 1957. She moved to the [[United States]] in 1958 to work and continue her studies in [[New York]].
 
  
As she began her practice, she was appalled by the hospital treatment of patients who were dying. She began giving a series of lectures featuring terminally ill patients, forcing medical students to confront people who were dying. Her extensive work with the dying led to ''On Death and Dying'' in 1969. She wrote over 20 additional books on the subject of dying.
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==Life==
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Born in [[Zurich]], [[Switzerland]] on July 8, 1926, Elisabeth Kübler was one of a set of identical [[multiple birth|triplet]]s.<ref name=newman>Laura Newman, [http://www.bmj.com/cgi/reprint/329/7466/627.pdf Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: Psychiatrist and pioneer of the death-and-dying movement], ''British Medical Journal,'' 329 (Sept. 2004): 627. Retrieved January 16, 2008.</ref> She weighed only two pounds at birth and was not expected to survive. Elisabeth struggled to find her own identity for as a child all three girls were dressed alike, and her teachers and parents had difficulty telling them apart. They even received the same grades, although Elisabeth was an outstanding student. She claims in her autobiography that she was best known for defending weak or handicapped children from [[bullying|bullies]]. She also created an animal hospital in her basement for wounded [[bird]]s, [[cat]]s, [[frog]]s, and other [[animal]]s. Her harsh father never understood her love of nature and animals, and once took her pet [[rabbit]] to a butcher and then forced Elisabeth to join the family as they ate her pet for dinner.
  
She also proposed the now famous [[Five Stages of Grief]] as a pattern of phases, most or all of which people tend to go through, in sequence, after being faced with the tragedy of their own impending [[death]]. The five stages of grief, in sequential order, are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. The five stages have since been adopted by many as applying to the survivors of a loved one's death, as well.
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Even as a youth, Elisabeth was determined to a make a major contribution to the world. In an interview with ABC News, she reported that she had dreamed of becoming the next [[Albert Schweitzer]]. Her father, however, wanted her to be his secretary. She refused and instead worked in a Zurich laboratory and then volunteered as a relief worker.  
  
She did not found the [[hospice care]] movement, but its adherents credit her with encouraging it. Kübler-Ross completed her degree in psychiatry at the [[University of Colorado at Boulder|University of Colorado]] in 1963 and has also received 23 honorary doctorates.  
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She visited a [[Nazi]] [[concentration camp]] in [[Poland]] after the end of the war and saw, on the blighted barrack walls, hundreds of images of [[butterfly|butterflies]], a [[symbol]] of [[rebirth]] amid mass [[death]]s. The experience left a profound impression. She attended medical school at the [[University of Zurich]], and after graduating she married a classmate, Emanuel Ross. They moved to the [[United States]] in 1958 and she later gave birth to two children. The marriage did not last and ended in divorced in 1976; however they remained friends until Emanuel's death in 1992. In 1963, Kübler-Ross completed her degree in psychiatry at the [[University of Colorado at Boulder|University of Colorado]]. It was there that began her strong academic interest in death and dying concerns, also known as [[thanatology]].  
  
In later life, Kubler-Ross became interested in [[out-of-body experiences]] and [[medium (spirituality)|mediumistic]] attempts to contact the dead. This led to a scandal connected with one medium, as well as attacks on her healing centers.
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In later life, Kübler-Ross became interested in [[metaphysics]], [[near death experience|near death]] and [[out-of-body experiences]] and [[medium (spirituality)|mediumistic]] attempts to contact the dead. She once said: "Death is simply a shedding of the physical body like the butterfly shedding its cocoon. It is a transition to a higher state of consciousness where you continue to perceive, to understand, to laugh, and to be able to grow."
  
Kübler-Ross suffered a series of strokes in 1995 which left her partially paralyzed on her left side. In a 2002 interview with [[The Arizona Republic]], she stated that she was ready for death. She died in 2004 at her home in [[Scottsdale, Arizona]].
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After encountering her first [[AIDS]] patient, Kübler-Ross felt compelled to create her own healing center on a 300-acre farm in [[Virginia]]. When the local residents found out she had plans to adopt abandoned AIDS-infected babies, her neighbors attacked her—firing bullets through her windows and at her animals. In 1994, her house was set on fire, destroying all her belongings as well as years of journals and research on death, dying, and the [[afterlife]]. Her understanding of loss and [[grief|grieving]] was deepened through her own personal hardships and painful life experiences.
  
== Honorary Degrees ==
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Kübler-Ross suffered a series of [[stroke]]s in 1995, which left her partially [[paralysis|paralyzed]] on her left side. In a 2002 interview with the ''[[The Arizona Republic|Arizona Republic]],'' she stated that she was ready for death. Several interviews and documentaries took place during the time around her death. Her research on death and dying, she believed, taught her the most important lessons about life—to live fully and to love unconditionally. Then, she said, "At the end of your days, you will bless your life because you have done what you came here to do." She died in 2004 at her home in Scottsdale, [[Arizona]].
*''Doctor of Science, H.C., Albany Medical College, New York 1974
 
*''Doctor of Laws, University of Notre Dame, IN.,1974
 
*''Doctor of Science, Smith College 1975
 
*''Doctor of Science, Molley College, Rockville Center, NY, 1976
 
*''Doctor of Humanities, St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, IN. 1975
 
*''Doctor of Laws, Hamline University, MN. 1975
 
*''Doctor of Humane Letters, Amherst College, MA. 1975
 
*''Doctor of Humane Letters, Loyola University, IL 1975
 
*''Doctor of Humanities, Hood College, MD 1976
 
*''Doctor of Letters, Rosary College, IL. 1976
 
*''Doctor of Pedagogy, Keuka College, NY 1976
 
*''Doctor of Humane Science, University of Miami, FL 1976
 
*''Doctor of Humane Letters, Bard College, NY 1977
 
*''Doctor of Science, Weston MA., 1977
 
*''Honorary Degree, Anna Maria College, MA., 1978
 
*''Doctor of Humane Letters, Union College, New York 1978
 
*''Doctor of Humane Letters, D'Youville College, New York 1979
 
*''Doctor of Science, Fairleigh Dickinson University, 1979
 
*''Doctor of Divinity, 1996
 
 
 
==Selected bibliography==
 
*''On Death & Dying'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone), 1969
 
*''Questions & Answers on Death & Dying'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone), 1972
 
*''Death: The Final Stage of Growth'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone), 1974
 
*''To Live Until We Say Goodbye'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone), 1978
 
*''The Doughy Letter -A Letter to a Dying Child'', (Celestial Arts/Ten Speed Press), 1979
 
*''Quest, Biography of EKR (Written with Derek Gill)'', (Harper & Row), 1980
 
*''Working It Through'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone),1981
 
*''Living With Death & Dying'', (Simon & Schuster/Touchstone),1981
 
*''Remember The Secret'', (Celestial Arts/Ten Speed Press)1981
 
*''On Children & Death'', (Simon & Schuster)1985
 
*''AIDS: The Ultimate Challenge'', (Simon & Schuster)1988
 
*''On Life After Death'', (Celestial Arts)1991
 
*''Death is of Vital Importance'', (Out of Print- Now ''The Tunnel and the Light'') 1995
 
*''Unfolding the Wings of Love'' (Germany only - Silberschnur), 1996
 
*''Making the Most of the Inbetween'', (Various Foreign) 1996
 
*''Aids & Love'', The Conference in Barcelona, (Spain) 1996
 
*''Longing to Go Back Home'', (Germany only - Silberschnur), 1997
 
*''The Wheel of Life'', (Simon & Schuster/Scribner),1997
 
*''Why Are We Here'', (Germany only - Silberschnur), 1999
 
*''The Tunnel and the Light'', (Avalon), 1999
 
*''Life lessons'', (With David Kessler), 2001
 
*''Real Taste of Life'': A photographic Journal
 
  
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==Work==
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As Kübler-Ross began her practice, she was appalled by the [[hospital]] treatment of patients who were dying. In her native [[Switzerland]], [[death]], like [[birth]], was considered a normal part of the [[life]] cycle and people died at home comfortably surrounded by [[family]] and friends. She deplored the practices of the [[United States]] and other countries that placed more emphasis on high-tech [[medicine]] and less on the patients' emotional process of dying. In interviews, she spoke of cultures, such as in [[Mexico]], where people visit the graves of their loved ones:
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<blockquote>They bring food, they talk to them, they have a feast. There are lots of cultures who have much less of a hangup. The old, old, old cultures are also much more natural. In the more sophisticated, more materialistic Western world, even to die costs a fortune. They put shoes on the dead that are comfortable to wear, and silk pillows, and put rouge on the cheeks, so they look like they're only asleep. It's so phony and so dishonest. But that's more of a modern day deterioration. In the old days, the farmers died here just like in Switzerland.<ref name=redwood> Daniel Redwood, [http://www.healthy.net/scr/interview.asp?Id=205 On Death and Dying], Interview with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, ''HealthWorld Online.'' Retrieved January 16, 2008.</ref></blockquote>
  
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She began interviewing dying patients in 1967 at the [[University of Chicago]]'s Billings Hospital where she was employed as a [[psychiatry|psychiatrist]]. She wanted to learn what patients were thinking as they lay dying. From this firsthand research, she proposed the now famous [[Five Stages of Grief]] as a pattern of phases, most or all of which people tend to go through, in sequence, after being faced with the tragedy of their own impending death. These five stages, in sequential order, are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. The five stages have since been adopted by many as applying to the survivors of a loved one's death, as well.
  
The '''Kübler-Ross model''' describes, in five discrete stages, the process by which people deal with grief and tragedy. [[Terminal illness|Terminally ill]] patients are said to experience these stages. The model was introduced by [[Elisabeth Kübler-Ross]] in her 1969 book ''On Death and Dying''. The stages have become well known, and are called the '''''Five Stages of Grief'''''.  
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She began giving a series of lectures featuring terminally ill patients, forcing medical students to confront people who were dying. Her extensive work with the dying led to the publication of ''On Death and Dying'' in 1969. This groundbreaking bestseller revolutionized how physicians treat dying patients. This book advocated for and ultimately produced more humane and compassionate treatment of the dying. She wrote over 20 additional books on the subject of dying, which were translated into 27 different languages.
  
==Enumeration of stages==
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A key to Kübler-Ross's success was her emphasis on [[communication]]. She revealed that patients truly wanted to review their lives, their illness, and their imminent death. She believed that when patients and doctors could talk honestly and fearlessly, a good death could be achieved.
The stages are:
 
  
# '''[[Denial]]''' : The initial stage: ''"It can't be happening."''
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Colleague Balfour Mount, called her "one of the most effective communicators of the twentieth century."<ref name=newman/>
# '''[[Anger]]''' : ''"How dare you do this to me?!"'' (either referring to God, oneself, or anybody perceived, rightly or wrongly, as "responsible")
 
# '''[[Bargaining]]'''  : ''"Just let me live to see my son graduate."''
 
# '''[[Depression (mood)|Depression]]''' : ''"I'm so sad, why bother with anything?"''
 
# '''[[Acceptance]]''' : ''"I know that I will be in a better place."''
 
  
Kübler-Ross originally applied these stages to any form of catastrophic personal loss (job, income, freedom). This also includes the [[death]] of a loved one and [[divorce]]. Kübler-Ross also claimed these steps do not necessarily come in order, nor are they all experienced by all patients, though she stated{{Fact|date=May 2007}} a person will always experience at least two.
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She did not found the [[hospice care]] movement, but its adherents credit her with encouraging it. In her lifetime, she received 23 honorary doctorates.
  
Others have noticed{{Fact|date=May 2007}} that any significant personal change can follow these stages. For example, experienced criminal defense attorneys are aware that defendants who are facing stiff sentences, yet have no defenses or mitigating factors to lessen their sentences, often experience the stages. Accordingly, they must get to the acceptance stage before they are prepared to plead guilty.{{Fact|date=March 2007}}
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When asked about the role of [[religion]] in a patient's [[grief]] process, she said:
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<blockquote>What makes a difference is if your spiritual quadrant is open. If you have a faith, any faith, any, that is solid and internalized, you have much less of a problem than if you are a wishy-washy Protestant or a wishy-washy Catholic or a wishy-washy Jew…we're all the same. We're all the same human beings. We all are born the same way. We all die the same way, basically. The experience of death and after death is all the same. It only depends how you have lived. If you have lived fully, then you have no regrets, because you have done the best you can do.… That's why I tell people, and I really mean it literally, if you're not doing something that really turns you on, do something that does turn you on, and you will be provided for to survive. Those people die with a sense of achievement, of priding themselves that they had the guts to do it.<ref name=redwood/></blockquote>
  
Additionally, the change in circumstances does not always have to be a negative one, just significant enough to cause a grief response to the loss (Scire, 2007). Accepting a new work position, for example, causes one to lose their routine, workplace friendships, familiar drive to work, even customary lunch sources.
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===Kübler-Ross model===
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The Kübler-Ross model describes, in five discrete stages, the process by which people deal with [[grief]] and tragedy. [[Terminal illness|Terminally ill]] patients are said to experience these stages as they grappled with their diagnosis, and their emotions along the way, right through to acceptance of their impending death. The model was introduced in her 1969 book ''On Death and Dying.'' The stages have become well known:
  
==Grief==
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# [[Denial]]: The initial stage: "It can't be happening."
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# [[Anger]]: "How dare you do this to me?!" (Either referring to God, oneself, or anybody perceived, rightly or wrongly, as "responsible.")
 +
# [[Bargaining]]: "Just let me live to see my son graduate."
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# [[Depression (mood)|Depression]]: "I'm so sad, why bother with anything?"
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# [[Acceptance]]: '"I know that I will be in a better place."
  
In [[popular culture]] these stages are almost exclusively applied only to news of one's own impending death. The notion that to resolve grief they must all be followed, in order, is also common.
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Kübler-Ross originally applied these stages to any form of catastrophic personal loss (job, income, freedom), which also includes the [[death]] of a loved one and [[divorce]].  
 +
She explained that if patients were allowed to express their anger, to cry and grieve, to finish their unfinished business, to articulate their fears (work through the above stages), then finally they would reach the last stage of acceptance. It can be a time of quiet and peaceful expectancy. She observed that the struggle disappeared and as one patient described it "the final rest began before the long journey."
  
Although, in 1974, "[[The Handbook of Psychiatry]]" defined [[grief]] as "...the normal response to the loss of a loved one by death," and response to other kinds of losses were labeled "Pathological Depressive Reactions," this has become the predominant way for counselors and professionals to approach grief, loss, tragedy and traumatic experiences.<ref>[http://www.counselingforloss.com/article8.htm Beware the 5 Stages of "Grief"] Retrieved July 5, 2007.</ref>
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===Grief===
  
Further, many psychiatrists believe real grieving begins after the stages are over, and that "grief work," involving its own set of stages, begins with acceptance, where the Kubler-Ross stages end.
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In 1974, ''The Handbook of Psychiatry'' defined [[grief]] as "the normal response to the loss of a loved one by death," and response to other kinds of losses were labeled "Pathological Depressive Reactions." However, the Kübler-Ross Five Stages have become the predominant way for counselors and professionals to approach grief, loss, tragedy, and traumatic experiences
  
==Research on the theory==
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Many psychiatrists believe real grieving begins after the stages are over, and that "grief work," involving its own set of stages, begins with acceptance, where the Kübler-Ross stages end.
  
A February 2007 study of bereaved individuals, from Yale University obtained some findings that were consistent with the five-stage theory and others that were inconsistent with it.<ref>[http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/297/7/716?etoc An Empirical Examination of the Stage Theory of Grief] Retrieved July 5, 2007.</ref>
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In [[popular culture]] these stages are almost exclusively applied only to news of one's own impending death. The notion that to resolve grief they must all be followed, in order, is also common.
  
 
==Criticism==
 
==Criticism==
  
The original Kübler-Ross model did not identify five stages of grief. It identified what Kubler-Ross called "the Five Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News."<ref>[http://www.counselingforloss.com/article8.htm Beware the 5 Stages of "Grief"] Retrieved July 5, 2007.</ref>
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Collin Murray Parkes, consultant psychiatrist at St. Christopher's Hospice in [[London]], credits five-stage theory and its high visibility as a catalyst in stimulating research and changing practice in the death and dying field. However, he notes that more current information shows that the five-stage framework is not as simple as initially described.
  
There exists no real evidence that stages are present in coping with death:  Using the terms stages implies that there is a set order of set conditions, meaning that everyone will go through each stage at the same time while confronting impending death. The order of the stages, as well as the amount of time each stage lasts can vary. Also, the definition of each stage is not clear, and some stages can be combined.  
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A February 2007 study of bereaved individuals, obtained some findings that were consistent with the five-stage theory and others that were inconsistent with it.<ref>Paul K. Maciejewski, Baohui Zhang, Susan D. Block, and Holly G. Prigerson, [http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/297/7/716?etoc An Empirical Examination of the Stage Theory of Grief], ''Journal of the American Medical Association'' 297, no. 7 (Feb. 2007). Retrieved January 16, 2008.</ref>
  
More specifically, there is no real evidence that people coping with their impending death move through all of the five stages. The path through the stages is not a one-way street: they can repeat, occur out of order or not at all. It is highly dependent on other qualities, such as emotional ties to family, and other relationships. These stages can also occur in a repetitive, spiral-like fashion where the individual is re-working and re-experiencing various grief stages over time. "Real events," such as moving, getting rid of the loved ones clothing or objects, etc. tend to trigger a grief regression in which the grieving individual may re-experience anger or shock or depression.
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In fact, her original model did not identify five stages of grief. Rather, she identified "the Five Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News."<ref>Larry Menkes, [http://www.relocalize.net/node/4457 The Five Stages of (Reaction Upon) Receiving Catastrophic News], ''Relocalization Network.'' Retrieved January 16, 2008.</ref>
  
The way in which the particular loss is experienced may strongly influence how grief is played out. A sudden loss or violent loss in which one is "blind-sided," caught unaware and unprepared, may create a traumatic loss which is probably more difficult to process and work through.{{Fact|date=May 2007}}
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There is no real evidence that people coping with their impending death move through all of the five stages. The path through the stages is not a one-way street: they can repeat, occur out of order, or not at all. It is highly dependent on other qualities, such as emotional ties to family, and other relationships. These stages can also occur in a repetitive, spiral-like fashion where the individual is re-working and re-experiencing various grief stages over time. "Real events," such as moving, getting rid of the loved one’s clothing or objects, tend to trigger a grief regression in which the grieving individual may re-experience anger, shock, or depression. The way in which the particular loss is experienced may also strongly influence how grief is played out.  
  
==In popular culture==
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To be fair to Kübler-Ross though, she also agreed that these steps do not necessarily come in order, nor are they all experienced by all patients, though she stated a person will always experience at least two.<ref> Christopher Reed, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1293825,00.html Elisabeth Kübler-Ross] (Obituary), ''The Guardian,'' August 31, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2008. </ref>
* In the TV show ''[[Frasier]]'', when Frasier is unemployed, there is an episode where he cycles through the stages. (Season 6)
 
  
* In the TV cartoon show ''[[The Simpsons]]'', the 5 stages were also shown in '[[One Fish, Two Fish, Blowfish, Blue Fish]]', where Homer discovers he will most likely die after eating a poisonus fish. Dr Julius Hibert tells him the 5 stages of grief, to which Homer replies instantly after each one (although fear/depression and bargaining are a different way around.
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==Legacy==
  
* In the TV cartoon show ''[[Robot Chicken]]'', the 5 stages are cited by a [[giraffe]] when it is sinking in quicksand.
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While her most well-known work is ''On Death and Dying'' and the five stages framework, Kübler-Ross was also a prolific author of more than 20 books. Her now-classic first book, ''On Death and Dying,'' is today considered the master text on the subject, and is required reading in most major [[medical school|medical]] and [[nursing]] schools and graduate schools of [[psychiatry]] and [[theology]]. Her lectures, workshops, media appearances, and books have reached millions of people around the world, opening discussion of sensitive yet profound issues that affect all people. She received the Modern Samaritan Award and the Ideal Citizen Award for her work.  
  
* In the TV show ''[[House (TV series)|House]]'', the 5 stages are referenced to by Dr. House when he criticizes Cameron's attitude toward diagnosing one of her patients. (Season 2)
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In an interview with ''[[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] News'' on December 18, 2001, “she said that she was most proud of her work with people with [[AIDS]] and creating [[hospice]] care for prisoners with AIDS.”<ref name=newman/>
  
* In the TV show ''[[Scrubs (TV Series)|Scrubs]]'' a patient goes through the 5 stages of grief and gets help from the hospitals grief counselor Dr Hedrick in the episode [[My Five Stages]].
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In a mission to continue her legacy, the Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation (EKR Foundation) was formed by her son Kenneth Ross. The mission of the EKR Foundation is simple: continue and grow Elisabeth's pioneering work with the dying and their loved ones.  
  
* In the TV show ''[[Monk (TV Series)|Monk]]'', Adrian Monk cycles through the stages repeatedly.
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Since her death, hers memory has been honored in many dedications and memorial services around the world. In May 2005, Desert Regional Medical Center, in Palm Springs, [[California]], named their annual hospice volunteer award the Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Hospice Volunteer Award. On June 30, 2005, Hospice of Arizona dedicated their new Pueblo Norte Inpatient Unit in honor of Elisabeth with the name The Butterfly Center. On July 8, 2005, The Dougy Center in Portland, [[Oregon]] unveiled their EKR Memorial. A more recent honor is her induction into the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, [[New York]] in September 2007, for her work as a groundbreaking crusader for the rights of the terminally ill, including hospice care, living wills, and speaking openly about life and death.
  
* In the TV show ''[[Dead Like Me]]'', [[George Lass]] notes that dead people go through the same cycle, as she does moments after her death. Her acceptance takes a little longer to accomplish than the other four which she passes through rapidly for comedic effect.
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==Selected bibliography==
 
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*1969 [1997]. ''On Death and Dying.'' Scribner [Simon & Schuster]. ISBN 0684842238.
* In the Comic series ''[[Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America]]''. Following the assassination of Captain American, the five part mini-series "Fallen Son" had chapters entitled:  Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.
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*1972 [1997]. ''Questions and Answers on Death and Dying.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839377.
 
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*1974 [1986]. ''Death: The Final Stage of Growth.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839415.
* In the 1979 Film ''[[All That Jazz]]'', stand-up performer Davis Newman, commenting on the impending/happening death of the main character, says, "This chick, man, without the sole benefit of dying herself, has broken down the process of dying into five stages: anger, denial, bargaining, depression and acceptance. Sounds like a Jewish law firm. 'Good morning, Angerdenialbargainingdepressionacceptance!'
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*1978 [1997]. ''To Live Until We Say Goodbye.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839482.  
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* 1981 [1997]. ''Working It Through.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839423.
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*1981 [1997]. ''Living with Death and Dying.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839369.
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*1982. ''Remember The Secret.'' Tricycle Press. ISBN 1883672791.
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*1985 [1997]. ''On Children and Death.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839393.
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*1988 [1997]. ''AIDS: The Ultimate Challenge.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839407.
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*1991. ''On Life after Death.'' Celestial Arts. ISBN 0890876533.
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*1997 [1998]. ''The Wheel of Life.'' Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684846314.
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*1999. ''The Tunnel and the Light: Essential Insights on Living and Dying.'' Marlowe & Co. ISBN 1569246904.
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*2000. ''Life Lessons.'' With David Kessler. Scribner. ISBN 0-684-87074-6.
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*2005. ''On Grief and Grieving.'' With David Kessler. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743266285.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 130: Line 101:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
*Chaban, Michèle.  ''The Life Work of Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross and Its Impact on the Death Awareness Movement.'' Lewiston: E. Mellen Press, 2000. ISBN 0773483020.
 +
*Gill, Derek. ''Quest: The Life and Death of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross.'' Ballantine Books, 1982. ISBN 0345300947.
 +
* Worth, Richard. ''Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: Encountering Death And Dying.'' Chelsea House Publications, 2004. ISBN 0791080277
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.elisabethkublerross.com/index.html Elisabeth Kübler-Ross]: Kübler-Ross's home page.
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All links retrieved February 13, 2024.
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*[http://www.ekrfoundation.org/ Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation]
 
*[http://www.wic.org/bio/eross.htm Women's International Center biography]
 
*[http://www.wic.org/bio/eross.htm Women's International Center biography]
*[http://ekrfoundation.org/ Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation]
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*[http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1293825,00.html Obituary] in ''The Guardian''
*[http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1293825,00.html Obituary] in [[The Guardian]]
 
*[http://economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=3150610 Obituary] in [[The Economist]]
 
*"[http://slate.msn.com/id/2107069/ Dead Like Her: How Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Went Around the Bend]" by [[Ron Rosenbaum]] in [[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]
 
  
  
 
{{credits|Elisabeth_Kübler-Ross|142029225|Kübler-Ross_model|142323805|}}
 
{{credits|Elisabeth_Kübler-Ross|142029225|Kübler-Ross_model|142323805|}}

Latest revision as of 16:14, 13 February 2024

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (1926 - 2004)

Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (July 8, 1926 – August 24, 2004) was a Swiss-born psychiatrist and the author of the groundbreaking book On Death and Dying, where she first discussed what is now known as the Kübler-Ross model of the stages in dealing with grief and facing death. She graduated from the University of Zürich medical school in 1957. She moved to the United States in 1958 to work and continue her studies in New York.

Interest in death as a transition into a higher state of consciousness moved from the realm of the solely religious when psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross caused physicians, psychiatrists, and scientists to take a new look at the meaning of death. Knowledge and understanding of the afterlife can help many overcome fear and pain when making preparations for their own death, or for that of someone they love. Understanding can help tremendously with the grieving or separation process. Kübler-Ross also believed that her research on death and dying revealed important lessons for living—to learn unconditional love and to fulfill life's purpose, which is service to others.

Life

Born in Zurich, Switzerland on July 8, 1926, Elisabeth Kübler was one of a set of identical triplets.[1] She weighed only two pounds at birth and was not expected to survive. Elisabeth struggled to find her own identity for as a child all three girls were dressed alike, and her teachers and parents had difficulty telling them apart. They even received the same grades, although Elisabeth was an outstanding student. She claims in her autobiography that she was best known for defending weak or handicapped children from bullies. She also created an animal hospital in her basement for wounded birds, cats, frogs, and other animals. Her harsh father never understood her love of nature and animals, and once took her pet rabbit to a butcher and then forced Elisabeth to join the family as they ate her pet for dinner.

Even as a youth, Elisabeth was determined to a make a major contribution to the world. In an interview with ABC News, she reported that she had dreamed of becoming the next Albert Schweitzer. Her father, however, wanted her to be his secretary. She refused and instead worked in a Zurich laboratory and then volunteered as a relief worker.

She visited a Nazi concentration camp in Poland after the end of the war and saw, on the blighted barrack walls, hundreds of images of butterflies, a symbol of rebirth amid mass deaths. The experience left a profound impression. She attended medical school at the University of Zurich, and after graduating she married a classmate, Emanuel Ross. They moved to the United States in 1958 and she later gave birth to two children. The marriage did not last and ended in divorced in 1976; however they remained friends until Emanuel's death in 1992. In 1963, Kübler-Ross completed her degree in psychiatry at the University of Colorado. It was there that began her strong academic interest in death and dying concerns, also known as thanatology.

In later life, Kübler-Ross became interested in metaphysics, near death and out-of-body experiences and mediumistic attempts to contact the dead. She once said: "Death is simply a shedding of the physical body like the butterfly shedding its cocoon. It is a transition to a higher state of consciousness where you continue to perceive, to understand, to laugh, and to be able to grow."

After encountering her first AIDS patient, Kübler-Ross felt compelled to create her own healing center on a 300-acre farm in Virginia. When the local residents found out she had plans to adopt abandoned AIDS-infected babies, her neighbors attacked her—firing bullets through her windows and at her animals. In 1994, her house was set on fire, destroying all her belongings as well as years of journals and research on death, dying, and the afterlife. Her understanding of loss and grieving was deepened through her own personal hardships and painful life experiences.

Kübler-Ross suffered a series of strokes in 1995, which left her partially paralyzed on her left side. In a 2002 interview with the Arizona Republic, she stated that she was ready for death. Several interviews and documentaries took place during the time around her death. Her research on death and dying, she believed, taught her the most important lessons about life—to live fully and to love unconditionally. Then, she said, "At the end of your days, you will bless your life because you have done what you came here to do." She died in 2004 at her home in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Work

As Kübler-Ross began her practice, she was appalled by the hospital treatment of patients who were dying. In her native Switzerland, death, like birth, was considered a normal part of the life cycle and people died at home comfortably surrounded by family and friends. She deplored the practices of the United States and other countries that placed more emphasis on high-tech medicine and less on the patients' emotional process of dying. In interviews, she spoke of cultures, such as in Mexico, where people visit the graves of their loved ones:

They bring food, they talk to them, they have a feast. There are lots of cultures who have much less of a hangup. The old, old, old cultures are also much more natural. In the more sophisticated, more materialistic Western world, even to die costs a fortune. They put shoes on the dead that are comfortable to wear, and silk pillows, and put rouge on the cheeks, so they look like they're only asleep. It's so phony and so dishonest. But that's more of a modern day deterioration. In the old days, the farmers died here just like in Switzerland.[2]

She began interviewing dying patients in 1967 at the University of Chicago's Billings Hospital where she was employed as a psychiatrist. She wanted to learn what patients were thinking as they lay dying. From this firsthand research, she proposed the now famous Five Stages of Grief as a pattern of phases, most or all of which people tend to go through, in sequence, after being faced with the tragedy of their own impending death. These five stages, in sequential order, are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. The five stages have since been adopted by many as applying to the survivors of a loved one's death, as well.

She began giving a series of lectures featuring terminally ill patients, forcing medical students to confront people who were dying. Her extensive work with the dying led to the publication of On Death and Dying in 1969. This groundbreaking bestseller revolutionized how physicians treat dying patients. This book advocated for and ultimately produced more humane and compassionate treatment of the dying. She wrote over 20 additional books on the subject of dying, which were translated into 27 different languages.

A key to Kübler-Ross's success was her emphasis on communication. She revealed that patients truly wanted to review their lives, their illness, and their imminent death. She believed that when patients and doctors could talk honestly and fearlessly, a good death could be achieved.

Colleague Balfour Mount, called her "one of the most effective communicators of the twentieth century."[1]

She did not found the hospice care movement, but its adherents credit her with encouraging it. In her lifetime, she received 23 honorary doctorates.

When asked about the role of religion in a patient's grief process, she said:

What makes a difference is if your spiritual quadrant is open. If you have a faith, any faith, any, that is solid and internalized, you have much less of a problem than if you are a wishy-washy Protestant or a wishy-washy Catholic or a wishy-washy Jew…we're all the same. We're all the same human beings. We all are born the same way. We all die the same way, basically. The experience of death and after death is all the same. It only depends how you have lived. If you have lived fully, then you have no regrets, because you have done the best you can do.… That's why I tell people, and I really mean it literally, if you're not doing something that really turns you on, do something that does turn you on, and you will be provided for to survive. Those people die with a sense of achievement, of priding themselves that they had the guts to do it.[2]

Kübler-Ross model

The Kübler-Ross model describes, in five discrete stages, the process by which people deal with grief and tragedy. Terminally ill patients are said to experience these stages as they grappled with their diagnosis, and their emotions along the way, right through to acceptance of their impending death. The model was introduced in her 1969 book On Death and Dying. The stages have become well known:

  1. Denial: The initial stage: "It can't be happening."
  2. Anger: "How dare you do this to me?!" (Either referring to God, oneself, or anybody perceived, rightly or wrongly, as "responsible.")
  3. Bargaining: "Just let me live to see my son graduate."
  4. Depression: "I'm so sad, why bother with anything?"
  5. Acceptance: '"I know that I will be in a better place."

Kübler-Ross originally applied these stages to any form of catastrophic personal loss (job, income, freedom), which also includes the death of a loved one and divorce. She explained that if patients were allowed to express their anger, to cry and grieve, to finish their unfinished business, to articulate their fears (work through the above stages), then finally they would reach the last stage of acceptance. It can be a time of quiet and peaceful expectancy. She observed that the struggle disappeared and as one patient described it "the final rest began before the long journey."

Grief

In 1974, The Handbook of Psychiatry defined grief as "the normal response to the loss of a loved one by death," and response to other kinds of losses were labeled "Pathological Depressive Reactions." However, the Kübler-Ross Five Stages have become the predominant way for counselors and professionals to approach grief, loss, tragedy, and traumatic experiences

Many psychiatrists believe real grieving begins after the stages are over, and that "grief work," involving its own set of stages, begins with acceptance, where the Kübler-Ross stages end.

In popular culture these stages are almost exclusively applied only to news of one's own impending death. The notion that to resolve grief they must all be followed, in order, is also common.

Criticism

Collin Murray Parkes, consultant psychiatrist at St. Christopher's Hospice in London, credits five-stage theory and its high visibility as a catalyst in stimulating research and changing practice in the death and dying field. However, he notes that more current information shows that the five-stage framework is not as simple as initially described.

A February 2007 study of bereaved individuals, obtained some findings that were consistent with the five-stage theory and others that were inconsistent with it.[3]

In fact, her original model did not identify five stages of grief. Rather, she identified "the Five Stages of Receiving Catastrophic News."[4]

There is no real evidence that people coping with their impending death move through all of the five stages. The path through the stages is not a one-way street: they can repeat, occur out of order, or not at all. It is highly dependent on other qualities, such as emotional ties to family, and other relationships. These stages can also occur in a repetitive, spiral-like fashion where the individual is re-working and re-experiencing various grief stages over time. "Real events," such as moving, getting rid of the loved one’s clothing or objects, tend to trigger a grief regression in which the grieving individual may re-experience anger, shock, or depression. The way in which the particular loss is experienced may also strongly influence how grief is played out.

To be fair to Kübler-Ross though, she also agreed that these steps do not necessarily come in order, nor are they all experienced by all patients, though she stated a person will always experience at least two.[5]

Legacy

While her most well-known work is On Death and Dying and the five stages framework, Kübler-Ross was also a prolific author of more than 20 books. Her now-classic first book, On Death and Dying, is today considered the master text on the subject, and is required reading in most major medical and nursing schools and graduate schools of psychiatry and theology. Her lectures, workshops, media appearances, and books have reached millions of people around the world, opening discussion of sensitive yet profound issues that affect all people. She received the Modern Samaritan Award and the Ideal Citizen Award for her work.

In an interview with ABC News on December 18, 2001, “she said that she was most proud of her work with people with AIDS and creating hospice care for prisoners with AIDS.”[1]

In a mission to continue her legacy, the Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Foundation (EKR Foundation) was formed by her son Kenneth Ross. The mission of the EKR Foundation is simple: continue and grow Elisabeth's pioneering work with the dying and their loved ones.

Since her death, hers memory has been honored in many dedications and memorial services around the world. In May 2005, Desert Regional Medical Center, in Palm Springs, California, named their annual hospice volunteer award the Elisabeth Kübler-Ross Hospice Volunteer Award. On June 30, 2005, Hospice of Arizona dedicated their new Pueblo Norte Inpatient Unit in honor of Elisabeth with the name The Butterfly Center. On July 8, 2005, The Dougy Center in Portland, Oregon unveiled their EKR Memorial. A more recent honor is her induction into the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York in September 2007, for her work as a groundbreaking crusader for the rights of the terminally ill, including hospice care, living wills, and speaking openly about life and death.

Selected bibliography

  • 1969 [1997]. On Death and Dying. Scribner [Simon & Schuster]. ISBN 0684842238.
  • 1972 [1997]. Questions and Answers on Death and Dying. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839377.
  • 1974 [1986]. Death: The Final Stage of Growth. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839415.
  • 1978 [1997]. To Live Until We Say Goodbye. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839482.
  • 1981 [1997]. Working It Through. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839423.
  • 1981 [1997]. Living with Death and Dying. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839369.
  • 1982. Remember The Secret. Tricycle Press. ISBN 1883672791.
  • 1985 [1997]. On Children and Death. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839393.
  • 1988 [1997]. AIDS: The Ultimate Challenge. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684839407.
  • 1991. On Life after Death. Celestial Arts. ISBN 0890876533.
  • 1997 [1998]. The Wheel of Life. Simon & Schuster [Touchstone]. ISBN 0684846314.
  • 1999. The Tunnel and the Light: Essential Insights on Living and Dying. Marlowe & Co. ISBN 1569246904.
  • 2000. Life Lessons. With David Kessler. Scribner. ISBN 0-684-87074-6.
  • 2005. On Grief and Grieving. With David Kessler. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743266285.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Laura Newman, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: Psychiatrist and pioneer of the death-and-dying movement, British Medical Journal, 329 (Sept. 2004): 627. Retrieved January 16, 2008.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Daniel Redwood, On Death and Dying, Interview with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, HealthWorld Online. Retrieved January 16, 2008.
  3. Paul K. Maciejewski, Baohui Zhang, Susan D. Block, and Holly G. Prigerson, An Empirical Examination of the Stage Theory of Grief, Journal of the American Medical Association 297, no. 7 (Feb. 2007). Retrieved January 16, 2008.
  4. Larry Menkes, The Five Stages of (Reaction Upon) Receiving Catastrophic News, Relocalization Network. Retrieved January 16, 2008.
  5. Christopher Reed, Elisabeth Kübler-Ross (Obituary), The Guardian, August 31, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Chaban, Michèle. The Life Work of Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross and Its Impact on the Death Awareness Movement. Lewiston: E. Mellen Press, 2000. ISBN 0773483020.
  • Gill, Derek. Quest: The Life and Death of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross. Ballantine Books, 1982. ISBN 0345300947.
  • Worth, Richard. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross: Encountering Death And Dying. Chelsea House Publications, 2004. ISBN 0791080277

External links

All links retrieved February 13, 2024.


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