Informal support for bereavement due to suicide: family and friends
Those bereaved by suicide have many sources of support. Many people used one or more of these. (See Help and support from professionals, Help from...
People bereaved by suicide face many problems and may feel emotions like guilt and anger (see First reactions and Changing emotions), so often they need help. This may come from many different sources, including family and friends (also see Self-help groups, conferences and helplines and Help from Cruse Bereavement Care).
General practitioners (GPs) can be an important source of care. Some people we talked to said that their GPs gave them plenty of time to talk about their feelings, though one man said that he had only a 10 minute appointment, which was not enough.
GPs also prescribed antidepressants, sedatives or sleeping tablets. However, some people did not want to take such a medicine and refused it or threw the tablets away. As one bereaved parent said “I’m not depressed, I’m grieving.” Another was convinced that it was her daughter’s antidepressants that had caused her to kill herself, and couldn’t bear the thought of taking pills.
Many people need more specialised help, which may come through individual, group or family counselling or psychotherapy.
Counsellors or psychotherapists work in different ways: some mainly listen, but will probably help people to explore and understand their feelings too. Others ask questions, suggest different ways of thinking about problems or challenge negative thought patterns. (For more information on different styles of counselling or psychotherapy see the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy)
Between Chloe’s death and her funeral, Linda and her husband found it really hard to sleep, and they hardly ate at all. Linda couldn’t stop thinking about the time when she found Chloe. One Sunday they decided to seek help so they went to the hospital and saw someone from the crisis management team. A member of the team gave them some tablets to help them sleep and someone else gave them useful advice to maintain their daily routines. Linda was also referred to a psychologist.
After one of Susan’s sons died by suicide she had counselling. The counsellor came from the hospital and went to Susan’s home once a fortnight for a year. The NHS provided this care.
Some of the people we talked to said that they did not want any counselling. Michael, who was living in Australia when he was bereaved, felt very depressed after his friend died. He could not work. After about 5 weeks his GP refused to sign the sick notes unless he agreed to have some counselling. He had about 6 weeks of counselling but did not find it useful; perhaps partly because he did not think he needed it and did not want to attend. He also wonders if it was just the wrong kind of counselling for him.
Those bereaved by suicide have many sources of support. Many people used one or more of these. (See Help and support from professionals, Help from...
There are many sources of support for those bereaved by suicide, but some people had not heard about them until many months after the death,...