Changing Funerals and Their Effects on Bereavement Grief in Japan.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2025

Bereavement is an extremely personal feeling, but Japanese society tends to disapprove of displays of negative personal emotion or weakness. For ages, mourning rituals like funerals provided an exception where social permission was given to sharing grief and seeking support. However, the form and significance of Japanese funerals have changed rapidly over the past generation, and especially since the advent of COVID-19 restrictions on assembly and travel. This paper overviews the trajectory of changes and continuities in mourning rituals in Japan, looking at their psychological and social impacts. It goes on to summarize recent Japanese research showing that appropriate funerals are not merely of psychological and social benefit, but may have an important role in reducing or supporting grief that might otherwise require medical and social work intervention.

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Concepts Keywords
Covid Bereavement
Disapprove buddhism
Funerals COVID-19
Important Female
Japanese Funeral Rites
funerals
Grief
Humans
Japan
Japan
Male
medical expenses
mortality
mourning
rituals
Social Support

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO role
disease IDO intervention

Original Article

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