“The person was like the glue in the cracked pot which was no longer there”: family-focused support for bereavement via co-production of a web-based intervention
“The person was like the glue in the cracked pot which was no longer there”: family-focused support for bereavement via co-production of a web-based intervention
Background: families, friends and support networks are key to managing bereavement. COVID-19 social restrictions prevented families and friends from being with the dying and participating in usual rituals to honour the dead. This resulted in social disconnection, feelings of guilt, and difficulty in making sense of the death and reconstructing relationships. In response to this context a theoretically informed, co-produced web-resource to facilitate meaning-making, which situates bereavement in the context of family and friends, was developed. This paper describes the development of the web-based intervention.
Study aims: to co-produce a web-based intervention theoretically informed by the family level extension Dual Process Model and Family Sense of Coherence, and pilot the intervention gaining user feedback to inform refinements in readiness for adoption and implementation.
Design and methods: following a scoping review, a mixed methods study was undertaken using an online survey via questionnaire and virtual co-production workshop with bereaved people and bereavement professionals.
Findings: survey respondents reported the pandemic negatively affected bereavement (guilt, isolation, inability to bear witness) but also presented new opportunities to celebrate the deceased and support the bereaved (new funeral rituals, technology, remote contact, social acknowledgement of grief). Sense-making and managing bereavement were helped through information-giving, support networks, and relocating the person within the family context. A web-resource to facilitate collective grief was viewed positively and endorsed. Key content including family activities to stimulate support, information regarding the range of grief experience and dealing with the practicalities, along with other sources of support was agreed by workshop participants to form the basis of the intervention.
Conclusion: the Families and Friends in Bereavement intervention encourages consideration of bereavement in the context of close social networks. It enables grief to be understood and managed within a shared experience by promoting communication and meaning-making.
Campling, Natasha
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Lund, Susi
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Allam, Alison
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Precious, Gail
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Myall, Michelle
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Campling, Natasha
0e0410b0-a9cd-486d-a51f-20d80df04791
Lund, Susi
239a4d54-13e1-4d69-8e3f-08475c20af47
Allam, Alison
c70cb1ed-e702-46b1-904a-465b467e2476
Precious, Gail
50dd2336-9392-4b38-a13f-3f66d3f1b5c2
Myall, Michelle
0604ba0f-75c2-4783-9afe-aa54bf81513f
Campling, Natasha, Lund, Susi, Allam, Alison, Precious, Gail and Myall, Michelle
(2023)
“The person was like the glue in the cracked pot which was no longer there”: family-focused support for bereavement via co-production of a web-based intervention.
F1000 Research.
(In Press)
Abstract
Background: families, friends and support networks are key to managing bereavement. COVID-19 social restrictions prevented families and friends from being with the dying and participating in usual rituals to honour the dead. This resulted in social disconnection, feelings of guilt, and difficulty in making sense of the death and reconstructing relationships. In response to this context a theoretically informed, co-produced web-resource to facilitate meaning-making, which situates bereavement in the context of family and friends, was developed. This paper describes the development of the web-based intervention.
Study aims: to co-produce a web-based intervention theoretically informed by the family level extension Dual Process Model and Family Sense of Coherence, and pilot the intervention gaining user feedback to inform refinements in readiness for adoption and implementation.
Design and methods: following a scoping review, a mixed methods study was undertaken using an online survey via questionnaire and virtual co-production workshop with bereaved people and bereavement professionals.
Findings: survey respondents reported the pandemic negatively affected bereavement (guilt, isolation, inability to bear witness) but also presented new opportunities to celebrate the deceased and support the bereaved (new funeral rituals, technology, remote contact, social acknowledgement of grief). Sense-making and managing bereavement were helped through information-giving, support networks, and relocating the person within the family context. A web-resource to facilitate collective grief was viewed positively and endorsed. Key content including family activities to stimulate support, information regarding the range of grief experience and dealing with the practicalities, along with other sources of support was agreed by workshop participants to form the basis of the intervention.
Conclusion: the Families and Friends in Bereavement intervention encourages consideration of bereavement in the context of close social networks. It enables grief to be understood and managed within a shared experience by promoting communication and meaning-making.
Text
359_The person was like the glue in the cracked pot which was no longer there Family-focused support for bereavement via co-production of a web-based intervention
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 21 June 2023
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478687
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478687
ISSN: 2046-1402
PURE UUID: 0b3b0904-6e27-4646-99d3-b0e06f092b9d
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Date deposited: 07 Jul 2023 16:36
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:54
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Contributors
Author:
Susi Lund
Author:
Alison Allam
Author:
Gail Precious
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