Introduction: Loss of employment is an experience that is lived and interpreted
differently depending on a series of individual variables, including the psychological
resources available to the affected person as well as their perception of their degree
of employability. Losing one’s job can be one of the most painful and traumatic events a
person has to withstand. Following a dismissal, the worker needs to overcome a period
of emotional adaptation to the loss. But that period of grieving can also condition the
job searching process of the individual and can be influenced by different variables,
highlighting the age and work experience. The objective of this study is to analyse the
relationship between intensity and type of affliction due to the loss of employment in
older workers and their level of employability.
Methods: We carried out a descriptive and analytical cross-sectional study. The
sample consisted of 140 unemployed participants, from 19 to 65 years of age—
users of Job Orientation in the Public Employment Service of Andalusia (Spain). Of the
total participants, 66 were unemployed and over 45 years of age. They all took the
Labour Insertion Potential Assessment Test and the Texas Revised Inventory of Grief,
adapted for job loss.
Results: Significant differences are shown in the grieving process due to loss of
employment between both groups, with the older unemployed living the process
more intensely. In relation to the employability potential, differences are found between
both groups in terms of availability, perceived difficulties and fears. Interrelationships
between total grieving intensity and the importance that older jobseekers give to work
are also indicated.
Conclusion: Loss of employment and the psychological and health consequences of
this situation are identified with those that arise in the grieving process. Older workers present a series of features that determine that their job loss grieving process is more
intense and lasts longer than that of other younger workers, regardless of whether the
job loss was recent or not. On the other hand, it is shown that the intensity of grieving
for job loss is related to the decrease of certain variables that are part of the concept
of employability.