38 research outputs found
Research protocol for a digital intervention to reduce stigma among males with a personal experience of suicide in the Australian farming community
TrĂȘs perspectivas gestuais para uma performance percussiva: tĂ©cnica, interpretativa e expressiva
Offspring death and subsequent psychiatric morbidity in bereaved parents: addressing mechanisms in a total population cohort
Factors related to suicideâs unpredictability: a qualitative study of adults with lived experience of suicide attempts
Talking through the Dead: The Impact and Interplay of Lived Grief after Suicide
In the aftermath of suicide, grief becomes a multi-faceted experience. Traditionally, this grief was silenced where the shame attached to suicide invalidated a person's need for expression. Even now, it can be difficult for people to fully articulate their grief, let alone find an empathetic audience. How do we examine this grief to more clearly hear the voices of the bereaved, and to better understand how to support those who are grieving a suicide death? Indeed, the ripple of suicide grief touches more than those traditionally considered to be impacted by the death. Whole communities can be affected and it cannot be presumed that researchers do not have their own lived experiences of suicide bereavement. In this way, the newly-opened discourse around the experience of suicide grief needs to be dissected within more practical and appropriate research. A balance needs to be created in research where the voices of grief can be included but the experiential context understood and respected