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Journal of Mixed Methods Research
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Social Support in Widowhood

A Mixed Methods Study

Stacey B. Scott

University of Notre Dame, IN, sscott5{at}nd.edu

C.S. Bergeman

University of Notre Dame, IN

Alissa Verney

University of Notre Dame, IN

Susannah Longenbaker

University of Notre Dame, IN

Megan A. Markey

University of Notre Dame, IN

Toni L. Bisconti

University of New Hampshire, Durham

Although social support is assumed to be an important factor following loss, the mechanisms by which it influences outcomes are not well understood. This study explored the nature of social support following loss using mixed methods. Widows participated in semistructured interviews 1 and 4 months after loss; a subsample completed 98 days of questionnaires between interviews. Interviews were analyzed using the constant comparative method; themes included the importance of supportive groups and the meaning of support. Social support trajectories were examined using hierarchical linear modeling; perceived social control explained differences in trajectories. Additional interviews were selected by their maximally divergent plots. The findings of these analyses were integrated to contribute a more detailed description of social support in the transition to widowhood.

Key Words: mixed methods • social support • bereavement • longitudinal

Journal of Mixed Methods Research, Vol. 1, No. 3, 242-266 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1558689807302453


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