Emerging findings on the transdiagnostic etiologic role of death anxiety in psychopathology, ongoing refinement of terror management theory, and other recent advances have led to an increased focus upon death anxiety in clinical psychology. These efforts are important and noteworthy. However, we argue that a fully existentially-informed clinical psychology would not simply include death anxiety as a static, objective, categorical consideration alongside other positivistic studies. Rather, an existential lens upon teaching, research, and applied professional practice of clinical psychology should yield a perspective emphasizing the subjective, phenomenological, qualitative, person-centered, and dynamic nature of how self-aware existence necessarily affects mental health. Here, we briefly review four ongoing lines of inquiry (philosophical existentialism, existential psychotherapy, death anxiety psychometrics, and terror management theory), and argue in favor of their increasingly intertwined integration with one another and with the broader field of clinical psychology. We propose methods for both academics and practitioners alike to more fully embrace an existentially-informed mindset, including articulating a set of recommendations across clinical work, research, and pedagogy. Examples include increased use of qualitative data via case study and mixed-method approaches in scholarship, enhanced incorporation of existential themes (including and beyond death anxiety) into clinical assessment and case conceptualization, and adoption of a student-focused freedom-enhancing existential mindset in pedagogy. Our field has made great strides in deepening the understanding of how life’s ultimate concerns inform functioning in recent years, and we argue for an even more robust endorsement of existential frameworks in clinical psychology.
Background: Distress screeners are an important form of psychological assessment instrument for their ability to efficiently detect self-reported symptomatology. One popular example is the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.