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Pensando fam ; 26(1): 3-17, 2022.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1428035

ABSTRACT

O presente estudo aborda perda, luto e resiliência na pandemia de COVID-19, apresentando considerações sobre a prática sistêmica com famílias. Trata-se de uma revisão narrativa da literatura nacional e internacional, em que foram sumarizados achados empíricos e recomendações para intervenções clínicas, com base na perspectiva sistêmica, face às demandas emergentes no atual contexto e à noção de experiência coletiva. Foram discutidas as múltiplas perdas associadas à COVID-19, as quais impactam estilos de vida, padrões de comportamento e interação, normas culturais e práticas relativas ao processo de morrer e à morte, aumentando potencialmente o risco de luto complicado, durante e após a pandemia. Enfatizou-se também o desenvolvimento adaptativo em meio às circunstâncias difíceis, com destaque à noção de resiliência familiar e a possíveis formas de promovê-la, incluindo a terapia familiar. Ademais, foram abordadas algumas das particularidades do processo clínico junto a famílias que experienciaram perdas na pandemia, incluindo recursos que podem ser utilizados pelo terapeuta, bem como desafios comumente vivenciados pelos profissionais nesse cenário.


The current study addresses loss, grief, and resilience amid the COVID-19 pandemic, presenting implications for systemic practice with families. This is a narrative review of the national (Brazilian) and international literature, in which empirical findings and recommendations for clinical interventions have been summarized, based on a systemic perspective, given the emerging demands in the current scenario and the notion of collective experience. We have discussed the multiple losses associated with COVID-19, which have an impact on lifestyles, patterns of behavior and interaction, and cultural norms and practices related to the process of death and dying, potentially increasing the risk of complicated grieving processes, during and after the outbreak. Adaptive development amid difficult circumstances have also been highlighted, with emphasis on the notion of family resilience and possible ways of promoting it, including family therapy. Furthermore, some of the particularities of the clinical process with families who experienced losses during the pandemic have been addressed, including resources that can be used by the therapist, as well as challenges commonly experienced by professionals in this scenario.

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