A psychologist, social worker, chaplain and/or spiritual leader can provide a safe space for siblings to talk and share their emotions. A grief counselor can help process strong emotions. Palliative care clinicians and child-life specialists can offer age-appropriate ways of talking with siblings, and facilitate special moments and memory-making. Your child’s primary physician can offer a deeper understanding of the family. A school nurse, guidance counselor, or teacher can provide support.
Siblings at End of Life
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If you have other children, you may be concerned about how to prepare them for the death of their sibling. It may feel unthinkable to talk about death openly, but siblings likely will have some idea of what is ahead and will have their own questions and concerns. Speaking honestly and gently can offer comfort and help reassure them that the family unit will survive. In being open, you will create a foundation of support, space and trust to talk about difficult things, now and in the future.
While most of the attention understandably will be focused on the sick child at the end of life, you of course want to be a good parent to all of your children. Self-care will help you maintain the capacity to emotionally support the siblings. Openly expressing your sadness and even fear—in age-appropriate ways that show you are still able to cope and care for the family—will help your children feel safe in expressing their own feelings.
Some siblings may want to be intimately involved. Others may be unable or not want to be so closely involved. As a parent, you may wonder what is appropriate. There are no right or wrong answers. If siblings express interest or desire, offering to have them participate can be helpful. Options may include making or giving something special to their sibling as they say goodbye, or being physically present at the death. Speaking to a member of the care team, a close relative, or someone who knows the siblings, can help you decide what is best for your family.
Whether or not they have been told directly, children often have a sense that their sibling’s health is seriously declining. Providing concrete, factual information can help prevent them from filling in the blanks of what they know or fear with misinformation.
It can be hard to know how to bring siblings into the conversation about end of life. A good place to start is to ask them what they know about their brother or sister’s illness. This conversation can provide a jumping-off point to share any new information, explore their questions and worries, and clarify any misunderstanding. It can be helpful, too, to encourage siblings to think about how they want to participate in the end-of-life experience. Planning ahead empowers siblings to be thoughtful about what they may want and need, and it gives parents the opportunity to provide support and reassurance.
As much as possible, have these conversations in familiar surroundings, gently, and with love and tenderness. You may find yourself having to answer many difficult and painful questions, some of which you may not have answers for. Be honest and direct, using age-appropriate language. Words like death, or dying, help avoid confusion, as many other terms (e.g., passing on, departing) have multiple meanings. This is particularly true for young children, who tend to be concrete thinkers and take things quite literally.
How Grief Shows Up
Enlisting Helpers
Keeping the Dialogue Open
Children's Understanding Depends on Developmental Stage
- Infants have no cognitive understanding of death, but they do grieve. They may experience death as separation, and often sense a caregiver’s emotional state, so it is important to maintain routines and avoid separation when possible.
- Preschool children (ages 2-5) see death as temporary and reversible, as in cartoons. Magical thinking (around age 5) is characteristic, and so preschoolers may believe that a death is the result of something they did or didn’t do, or that they somehow have the power to cause the death (or reverse it).
- Children ages 6-9 are concrete thinkers but still do not understand that death is permanent. They still may believe that it will never happen to them or anyone they know.
- Children ages 9-11 remain concrete thinkers. They have some capacity to put themselves in other people’s shoes and may have a sense that others can die.
- Around age 12, children begin to have abstract thinking and come to understand that death is final, irreversible, and will happen to everyone. Adolescence, however, has many phases and each phase may bring with it different responses.