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Social Science and Public Policy

Bereavement Expectancies: Introduction to a New Population Health Metric

March 25, 2025 at 3:30pm5:00pm

Eggers Hall, 060

Ashton Verdery (Penn State University) will present “Bereavement Expectancies:
Introduction to a New
Population Health Metric” as part of the CPR Seminar Series. This event is co-sponsored by the Sociology Department. 

Abstract: Recent years have seen substantial attention to changes in population health metrics that track mortality sources, trends, and
disparities. Although existing metrics offer important population-level insights, they focus on aggregating individualized experiences of
death rather than considering its social ramifications, such as how death affects surviving family members.

A growing body of scholarship
on bereavement—the experience of losing close contacts—offers new considerations for what population health metrics might measure.
Experiencing bereavement, especially of family members, is strongly associated with detrimental outcomes, including poor mental
health, diminished physical health, and elevated mortality risks. However, no formalized population health metrics currently capture
bereavement sources, trends, and disparities. We introduce the concept of bereavement expectancy, a new population health metric
similar to life expectancy that summarizes the population-level probability of losing different types of relatives to different causes of death
across demographic groups.

Drawing on recently developed methods, bereavement expectancies provide point-in-time estimates of the
bereavement landscape implied by a given demographic regime. To illustrate their utility, we calculate bereavement expectancies for 113
causes of death in the United States, with a particular focus on racial disparities in exposure to familial death from different causes. By linking
classic measures of mortality to familial bereavement, bereavement expectancies offer new insights into the lived experience of health
disparities and their potential for intergenerational impacts

This event was published on March 12, 2025.


Event Details