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Devastating Losses
How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs
By: William Feigelman, John Jordan, Beverly Feigelman, John Macintosh
Paperback | 14 August 2012
At a Glance
304 Pages
23.5 x 14.61 x 2.54
Paperback
RRP $101.00
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Based on my forty year career in grief counseling, I give this work an unqualified recommendation for both professionals who care for grieving parents as well as for parents who are trying to understand their own losses or those of relatives or friends."--Gerald Corey, EdD, ABPP; in Illness, Crisis, and Loss
This notable book provides new and substantive research data and perspective about how parents cope with the devastation that follows the death of a child to suicide or drugs...It greatly enriches our understanding to offer appropriate response for the healing journey of traumatically bereaved parents."--The Forum: The Newsletter of the Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC)
[The] Feigelmans initiated the broadest and most conclusive survey data collection project regarding parent survivors. The result is the most current and comprehensive understanding of parent suicide survivors to date, with survivors ranging from the newly bereaved to those whose loss was well over a decade ago. This fact alone would ensure Devastating Loss''s designation as an essential resource for mental health professionals, suicide survivors, and grief experts around the world. However, there is additional value in this work which is far greater than just the data collection."--American Association of Suicidology
In addition to tugging on my heartstrings, Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope with the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs captivated my clinical quest for knowledge. The authors combined personal stories of survivors who lost children to suicide or drug related deaths with a profundity of solid quantitative research and clinical experience."--The Professional Counselor (TPC) Journal
Finally, a thorough and elaborate American study has appeared on the grief and mourning process of bereaved parents who experienced the loss of a child to suicide or a drug overdose."--LAVA
[This] reader experienced surprise in reading the book. It was not surprising that these experts did a good job; after all, they are experts writing on a topic they know well. Rather, it is the personal element, not often seen amidst so much data. The book is like a recipe for chicken salad that includes prunes, an unexpected combination that works quite well."--Death Studies
"Grounded equally in solid clinical practice and uniquely relevant research, and tragically leavened by the personal bereavement of two of the book''s authors, Devastating Losses sheds new and compassionate light on the experience of a child''s death to traumatic causes."
Robert A. Neimeyer, PhD
Editor, Death Studies
The book is important for its contributions to knowledge of a complex and illusive subject, and also??perhaps as importantly??a model for personal growth in the context of loss through learning and connection."--Clinical Social Work Journal
This volume is a pioneering and long overdue work, a study not only of grieving parents who lost a child to suicide but also of parents whose children succumbed to drug overdoses. The authors have done a masterful job of blending their quantitative research findings and the anguished voices of parents attending survivor support groups to create a rich and very engaging book.
Michael F Myers, MD
Co-Author, "Touched by Suicide: Hope and Healing after Loss"
"I recommend this book for its impressive scope of data and thoughtful analysis. This resource will also be of value to those coping with the devastating loss of a family member or loved one."
Edward K. (Ted) Rynearson
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of Washington
Director, Violent Death Bereavement Society
Author, Retelling Violent Death, and Editor, Violent Death: Resilience and Intervention Beyond the Crisis
This book fills a critical gap in our scientific understanding of the grief response of parents who have lost a child to traumatic death and the psychotherapeutic strategies that best facilitate healing. It is based on the results of the largest study ever conducted of parents surviving a child''s traumatic death or suicide. The book was conceived by William and Beverly Feigelman following their own devastating loss of a son, and written from the perspective of their experiences as both suicide-survivor support group participants and facilitators. It intertwines data, insight, and critical learning gathered from research with the voices of the 575 survivors who participated in the study.
The text emphasizes the sociological underpinnings of survivors'' grief and provides data that vividly documents their critical need for emotional support. It explains how bereavement difficulties can be exacerbated by stigmatization, and by the failure of significant others to provide expected support. Also explored in depth are the ways in which couples adapt to the traumatic loss of a child and how this can bring them closer or render their relationship irreparable. Findings suggest that with time and peer support affiliations, most traumatically bereaved parents ultimately demonstrate resilience and find meaningful new roles for themselves, helping the newly bereaved or engaging in other humanitarian acts.
Key Features:- Offers researchers, clinicians, and parent-survivors current information on how parents adapt initially and over time after the traumatic loss of a child
- Presents data culled from the largest survey ever conducted (575 individuals) of parents surviving a child''s suicide or other traumatic death
- Investigates the ways in which stigmatization complicates and prolongs the grieving process
- Addresses the tremendous value of support groups in the healing process
- Explores how married couples are affected by the traumatic loss of their child
| Foreword | p. xiii |
| Acknowledgments | p. xix |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Theoretical Issues Guiding This Study and How the Data Were Collected | p. 15 |
| The Plan of This Book | p. 15 |
| Theoretical Issues Guiding This Research | p. 17 |
| Studying a More Approachable Question | p. 20 |
| Study Methods, Sample Characteristics, and Measurements | p. 22 |
| Quantitative Data Sources, and Methods | p. 22 |
| Characteristics of the Sample | p. 25 |
| Measurements | p. 26 |
| Additional Qualitative Data Sources | p. 28 |
| Thoughts on the Difficulties of Doing Traumatic-Loss Research | p. 29 |
| Factors Associated With the Loss Experience | |
| Suicide Stigma and Compounding a Survivor's Grief Difficulties | p. 39 |
| Introduction | p. 39 |
| Findings on Stigmatization | p. 45 |
| Implications | p. 53 |
| Drug-Overdose Deaths and Survivors' Grief: A Greatly Neglected Subject | p. 59 |
| Introduction | p. 59 |
| The Trajectory of Grief After Drug-Overdose Deaths | p. 63 |
| Methodological Concerns | p. 66 |
| Measures | p. 67 |
| Type of Loss | p. 67 |
| Results | p. 69 |
| Stigma, Grief, and Mental Health Problem Behaviors | p. 69 |
| Controlling for Potential Confounding Variables | p. 70 |
| Discussion | p. 74 |
| Conclusion | p. 78 |
| Differences in the Suicide Death Circumstances and How They May Affect a Survivor's Grief | p. 81 |
| Introduction | p. 81 |
| Measures of Interest | p. 84 |
| Finding the Body | p. 84 |
| Surprise at the Death | p. 84 |
| Prior Relationships | p. 84 |
| Suicide Method | p. 85 |
| Results | p. 85 |
| Interpreting Our Findings | p. 91 |
| Grief Overload: The Impact of Multiple Losses, Only-Child Loss, and Multiple Stressor Events on Bereaved Parents | p. 97 |
| Sustaining Multiple Losses | p. 98 |
| Differences in Grief and Mental Health Problems | p. 103 |
| Losing One's Only Child | p. 106 |
| Exploring Associations Between Other Potential Stressful Events and Parent Survivors' Grief | p. 114 |
| Summary and Conclusion | p. 116 |
| Forms of Bereavement Assistance and How They Help Survivors Cope | |
| Early Years After Loss: Survivors Get Help and Advance From Their Depths of Despair | p. 225 |
| Responses From Our Survey Participants | p. 127 |
| Help-Seeking Activities of All Newly Bereaved Parents | p. 128 |
| What Helps Survivors the Most? | p. 132 |
| Type of Loss and Differences in Getting Help | p. 133 |
| How Did Our Respondents Use Different Healing Aids? | p. 138 |
| The Social Characteristics of Those Avoiding All Professional Mental Health and Peer Help Altogether | p. 139 |
| Social and Grief Characteristics of Those Using Support Groups and Professional Counseling Help | p. 141 |
| Summing Up | p. 144 |
| Later Years After Loss: Identifying the Postvention Needs of Survivors | p. 147 |
| Introduction | p. 147 |
| Investigating the Correlates of Grief and Psychological Difficulties Among Longer Term Bereaved Parents | p. 152 |
| Bereaved Parents' Use of Healing Aids in Later Years After Loss, Their Postvention Needs, and Examining Whether They Comprise an At-Risk Population | p. 158 |
| The Healing Potential of Suicide Survivor Support Groups | p. 171 |
| Introduction | p. 171 |
| The Group Studied | p. 174 |
| Survivors Pursue Their Common Goals | p. 175 |
| Conclusion | p. 183 |
| Suicide Survivor Support Groups: Comings and Goings | p. 187 |
| Introduction | p. 187 |
| Social Factors Associated With Joining a Support Group | p. 188 |
| Findings | p. 189 |
| Frequency of Peer Support Group Participation During the Past Year | p. 189 |
| Correlates of Current Support Group Participation | p. 190 |
| Conclusions: Who Joins Support Groups? | p. 192 |
| Why Do Many Survivors Eventually Withdraw From Support Groups? | p. 195 |
| Findings on Support Group Departures | p. 197 |
| Clarifying the Synergistic Association Between Seeing Bereavement Counselors and Going to Support Groups | p. 197 |
| Why Survivors Leave Support Groups During Early Grieving Years: Facilitator Skill Issues | p. 199 |
| Departures Among the Newly Bereaved (Not Associated With Leadership Deficiencies) | p. 202 |
| Departures Among Survivors With Longer Associations in Support Groups | p. 206 |
| Posttraumatic Growth Through Social Activism | p. 209 |
| Summary and Conclusions | p. 211 |
| Personal Growth After a Suicide Loss: Is It Associated With a Survivor's Mental Health? | p. 215 |
| Introduction | p. 215 |
| Findings | p. 219 |
| Summary and Study Limitations | p. 224 |
| Conclusions | p. 228 |
| Internet Support Groups for Suicide Survivors: A New Form of Grief Support | p. 232 |
| Introduction | p. 231 |
| Gathering the Data for This Chapter | p. 233 |
| Results | p. 234 |
| Use Patterns | p. 234 |
| What Internet Support Group Members Value About Online Participation | p. 236 |
| Reasons for Seeking an Internet Group | p. 239 |
| Demographic Characteristics of Internet and Face-to-Face Group Affiliates | p. 240 |
| Differences in Grief Difficulties and Mental Health Problems | p. 240 |
| Summary and Implications | p. 247 |
| The Impact of a Child's Traumatic Death on Married Couples | |
| Gender Differences in Grief After the Death of a Child | p. 255 |
| Marital Cohesion and Help Seeking | p. 263 |
| Gender Differences in Grief and Mental Health Difficulties | p. 265 |
| Investigating Whether Child Loss Promotes Harmony or Discord Among Married Couples | p. 273 |
| Survey Data | p. 277 |
| Marital Solidarity | p. 279 |
| Demographic Variables | p. 281 |
| Psychological Variables | p. 282 |
| Correlates of Increased Marital Closeness | p. 287 |
| Summing Up | p. 289 |
| Where Do We Go From Here? | p. 293 |
| Suggestions for Future Research | p. 295 |
| Appendix | p. 303 |
| Index | p. 335 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780826107466
ISBN-10: 082610746X
Series: SPRINGER
Published: 14th August 2012
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 304
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: SPRINGER PUBLISHING COMPANY
Country of Publication: GB
Dimensions (cm): 23.5 x 14.61 x 2.54
Weight (kg): 0.48
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