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A Multifactorial Approach to Predicting Death Anxiety: Assessing the Role of Religiosity,Susceptibility to Mortality Cues,and Individual Differences
Authors:Carrie French  Nathan Greenauer  Catherine Mello
Institution:1. Applied Psychology Program, The Pennsylvania State University, Berks, Reading, Pennsylvania, USA;2. Rehabilitation and Human Services/Applied Psychology Program, The Pennsylvania State University, Berks, Reading, Pennsylvania, USA
Abstract:Death anxiety is not only experienced by individuals receiving end-of-life care, but also by family members, social workers, and other service providers who support these individuals. Thus, identifying predictors of individual differences in experienced death anxiety levels may have both theoretical and clinical ramifications. The present study assessed the relative influence of religiosity, susceptibility to mortality cues, state and trait anxiety, and demographic factors in the experience of death anxiety through an online survey distributed to members of two online communities related to end-of-life care. Results indicated that cognitive and emotional susceptibility to mortality cues, as well as gender, predicted differences in death anxiety. Conversely, religiosity and age did not increase the predictive power of the model. Thus, death anxiety may be a function of emotional, cognitive, and sociocultural factors that interact in complex, but predictable, ways to modulate the response to mortality cues that occur in one’s life.
Keywords:Death anxiety  fear of death  gender  mortality salience  religiosity
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