4.3 Article

Continuing Bonds after Loss by Suicide: A Systematic Review

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19052963

Keywords

continuing bonds; grief; bereavement; suicide; systematic review

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship [GNT1157796]

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This systematic review investigated the experience of continuing bonds among individuals bereaved by suicide. The majority of participants reported positive experiences with continuing bonds. However, differences between males and females and between suicide bereaved individuals and those bereaved by other causes were observed. Further research, including longitudinal community-based studies, is needed to explore the evolution and experience of continuing bonds over time and inform strategies for supporting individuals bereaved by suicide.
The concept of continuing bonds as an alternative to detachment from the deceased person has gained traction in grief literature over the years. Those bereaved by suicide are likely to experience various grief reactions and may be at-risk for adverse grief and mental health outcomes. However, it remains unclear how those bereaved by suicide experience continuing bonds. To address this gap, we conducted a systematic review according to PRISMA guidelines. Searches of peer-reviewed literature in Medline, PsycINFO, Embase, Emcare, EBM Reviews, and Scopus identified 15 studies (2 quantitative and 13 qualitative) reporting on 12 samples, published between 2010 and 2021. The study quality of the quantitative studies was poor, but it was fair amongst the qualitative studies. People bereaved by suicide experienced continuing bonds across a variety of domains and reported mostly positive experiences. Factors that tended to have an impact on the expression of continuing bonds included time since bereavement, relationship to the deceased, social expectations, sex of the bereaved, and the ability of the bereaved to make meaning of the death. The review concludes that most participants reported positive experiences with continuing bonds. However, discrepancies between males and females and between those bereaved by suicide and those bereaved by other causes warrants further investigation. In addition, longitudinal community-based research involving representative samples is needed to understand the evolution and experience of continuing bonds over time in those bereaved by suicide and to inform future efforts in supporting them.

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