Evaluating the Effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Managing Prolonged Grief Disorder Among Emerging Adults

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is widely regarded as the gold standard for promoting healthier emotional coping mechanisms. While grief is a natural response to loss, for some individuals this process becomes prolonged and impairing—resulting in Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD). This paper reviews the impact of PGD on emerging adulthood, focusing on how it can hinder emotional development during this critical stage. Additionally, this paper serves as a clinical synthesis that evaluates the effectiveness of CBT in treating individuals experiencing PGD. By reviewing current research and clinical applications, the paper highlights CBT’s role in helping individuals process grief, restructure maladaptive cognitions, and transition from prolonged distress to integrated grief, where loss is accepted as part of one’s life while maintaining emotional stability.

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Work Title Evaluating the Effectiveness of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Managing Prolonged Grief Disorder Among Emerging Adults
Access
Open Access
Creators
  1. Angel Mora
Keyword
  1. Grief
  2. Prolonged Grief Disorder
  3. PGD
  4. CBT
  5. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  6. Emerging Adulthood
  7. Integrated Grief
License CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike)
Work Type Masters Culminating Experience
Sub Work Type Scholarly Paper/Essay (MA/MS)
Program Applied Clinical Psychology
Degree Master of Arts
Acknowledgments
  1. Dr. Melanie Hetzel-Riggin
  2. Dr. James J. Hodge
Publisher
  1. ScholarSphere
Publication Date March 2025
Language
  1. English
DOI doi:10.26207/39nd-2n85
Deposited April 17, 2025

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Version 1
published

  • Created
  • Updated
  • Updated Keyword, Language, Degree, and 4 more Show Changes
    Keyword
    • Grief, Prolonged Grief Disorder, PGD, CBT, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Emerging Adulthood, Integrated Grief
    Language
    • English
    Degree
    • Master of Arts
    Program
    • Applied Clinical Psychology
    Description
    • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is widely regarded as the gold standard for promoting healthier emotional coping mechanisms. While grief is a natural response to loss, for some individuals this process becomes prolonged and impairing—resulting in Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD). This paper reviews the impact of PGD on emerging adulthood, focusing on how it can hinder emotional development during this critical stage. Additionally, this paper serves as a clinical synthesis that evaluates the effectiveness of CBT in treating individuals experiencing PGD. By reviewing current research and clinical applications, the paper highlights CBT’s role in helping individuals process grief, restructure maladaptive cognitions, and transition from prolonged distress to integrated grief, where loss is accepted as part of one’s life while maintaining emotional stability.
    Sub Work Type
    • Scholarly Paper/Essay (MA/MS)
    Publication Date
    • 2025-03
  • Updated Acknowledgments Show Changes
    Acknowledgments
    • Dr. Melanie Hetzel-Riggin, Dr. James J. Hodge
  • Added Creator Angel Mora
  • Added Mora 2025 - Evaluating the Effectiveness of CBT in PGD among Emerging Adults.pdf
  • Updated License Show Changes
    License
    • https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
  • Published Publisher Show Changes
    Publisher
    • ScholarSphere
  • Updated