Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

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

1110785088
Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

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

52.49 In Stock
Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

Devastating Losses: How Parents Cope With the Death of a Child to Suicide or Drugs

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Overview

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


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826107473
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
Publication date: 06/20/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 360
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

William Feigelman, PhD, is Professor Emeritus and Adjunct Professor of Sociology at Nassau Community College (Garden City, New York), where he has taught for more than 44 years and still teaches part-time. Author and co-author of six books and more than 40 journal articles, he has written on a wide variety of social science subjects including child adoptions, youth alcohol and drug abuse, problem gambling, tobacco use and cessation, and intergroup relations. Since 2002, after his son Jesse's suicide, Dr. Feigelman has focused his professional writings on youth suicide and suicide bereavement. This work has appeared in Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, Death Studies, Omega: Journal of Death and Dying and Illness, Crisis and Loss. He is a member of the American Association of Suicidology and the Association for Death Education and Counseling, a frequent presenter at bereavement conferences in the U.S., Canada, and Japan, and a co-facilitator of a survivors' support group

Table of Contents

"

Introduction

Chapter 1: Theoretical Issues Guiding this Research and How the Data were Collected

Section I: Factors Associated With the Loss Experience

Chapter 2: Suicide Stigma and Compounding of a Survivor's Grief Difficulties
Chapter 3: Drug Overdose Deaths and Survivors' Grief: A Greatly Neglected Subject
Chapter 4: Differences in the Suicide Death Circumstances And How They May Affect Survivors' Grief
Chapter 5: Grief Overload: The Impact of Multiple Losses, Only Child Loss and Multiple Stressor Events on Bereaved Parents

Section II: Forms of Bereavement Assistance and How They Help Survivors Cope

Chapter 6: Early Years After Loss: Survivors Get Help and Advance from Their Depths of Despair
Chapter 7: Later Years After Loss: Identifying the Postvention Needs of Survivors
Chapter 8: The Healing Potential of Survivor Support Groups
Chapter 9: How Survivors Use Support Groups: Comings and Goings
Chapter 10: Personal Growth After A Suicide Loss: Is it Associated With A Survivor's Mental Health?
Chapter 11: Internet Support Groups for Suicide Survivors: A New Form of Grief Support

Section III: The Impact of a Child's Traumatic Death on Married Couples

Chapter 12: Gender Differences in Grief After the Death of a Child
Chapter 13: Investigating Whether Child Loss Promotes Harmony or Discord Among Married Couples

Section IV: Where Do we Go From Here?

Chapter 14: Suggestions for Future Research

Appendix: The Survey Research Instrument

"
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