E N D
2.
H&S
No Smoking
Loos
Mobile Phones
Breaks & refreshments
Welcome and Housekeeping
3. Programme for the day Informal & interactive
Range of teaching methods
Some small group work
Regular breaks throughout the day
BYO lunch
Evaluation
End by 4.15 pm!
4. Ground Rules Shared learning experience – respecting each other’s opinions
Confidentiality
Listening / ‘One at a time’
Time keeping
Looking after yourself
Ok to have fun!
5. Learning Objectives & Outcomes By the end of this session you will:
Understand how grief and loss impacts on people’s lives
Understand & feel more confident about the role you can take in providing appropriate & timely levels of support and information to family and friends
Be aware of the range and types of bereavement support services and information available locally and nationally
Understand the impact and importance of looking after yourself when involved in end of life care
6. Individual introductions and expectations of the day
Your name
Your role at work
One thing you’re hoping to get out of the day
7. Facts & Figures
54% of all complaints in the NHS relate to end of life care and bereavement (Healthcare commission 2007).
Approximately 6,000 deaths occur in Gloucestershire each year (Cruse, 2008).
2-8 people will be affected by each death.
Bereavement support needs vary significantly.
With support and information most people(80-90%) cope well following the death of someone significant in their life (NICE, 2004).
In addition to the support provided by family and friends bereaved people benefit from the support and information provided by health and social care practitioners.
8.
Jargon?
Slang?
Euphemisms?
Humour? Language & Terminology
9. Language & Terminology
Bereavement
Grief
Mourning
10. BEREAVEMENT
The state of having suffered a loss; either physical (e.g. through death) or psychological (e.g. loss of status)
11. GRIEF A universal, natural response to loss typically manifested and expressed through thoughts, feelings and behaviours.
12. MOURNING The social, public and culturally influenced experience of sharing grief through the process of rituals and customs such as attending funerals & memorials, wearing mourning clothes, reading scriptures & praying
13. Who, Where & When we meet bereaved adults at work? Who?
Family & Friends of deceased
Fellow Residents / Patients /Clients
Staff /Colleagues
You
14. Who, Where & When we meet bereaved adults? Where?
At home
Hospital wards
Care Homes
Nursing Homes
GP Surgery / receptions
Hospices / receptions
Funerals
Local community
15. Who, Where & When we meet bereaved adults? When?
First few hours
First few days
First few weeks
First few months
First few years
Many years later…..
16. Types of support? Information
Practical
Emotional
Cultural
Spiritual
Specialist
17. Personal reflections & attitudes Small group work
18. Take a break Time for coffee!
19. Common reactions to death & loss Small group work
20. Theories & Models of Grief Theories & models of grief attempt to explain how, when & why grief happens and provide a framework from which helping strategies can be developed
21. Worden’s Tasks of Mourning (1989) To accept the reality of loss
To experience and work through the pain of grief
To adjust to an environment in which the dead person is missing
To withdraw emotional energy and reinvest in new relationships
22. Factors influencing grief
Quality & type of relationship with person who has died
How, when & where death occurred
(e.g. sudden or unexpected, traumatic or peaceful)
Age, gender & level of understanding
Previous experience of loss
23. Factors influencing grief (cont)
Cultural and religious beliefs & influences
Involvement in mourning rituals
(e.g. attending or not attending the funeral)
Support network & coping strategies
Other concurrent stressors
24. Talking to the bereaved:Barriers to offering support? Four key barriers to communication/support:
You – e.g. role and responsibility, your own personal issues, fear of showing own emotions, saying the wrong thing & confidence in dealing with emotional/difficult responses.
The bereaved person - e.g. fear of breaking down in front of a health or care professional and/or not believing staff will have the time to listen.
Environment - e.g. workplace culture, role & responsibility, time and place.
Cultural – e.g. inadequate command of each other’s language and lack of understanding of cultural differences
25. Talking to the bereaved
Helpful & Unhelpful Comments?
26. Unhelpful comments… ‘I know exactly how you’re feeling’
‘Time’s a great healer’
‘It’s a blessing in disguise’
‘At least he/she got to live to be that age’
‘Oh well, you’re young enough to have another child’
27. Other unhelpful responses… Other unhelpful responses can include:
People not mentioning / acknowledging what has happened
People crossing the road to avoid speaking
People overwhelming you with their experiences of loss
Being told not to cry
Being told to get on with life
Being told to cheer up
Being expected to be back to normal after a couple of months
28. More helpful comments and responses…
‘I’m sorry to hear about the death of your mother’.
‘I can’t imagine how you are feeling’.
Allowing someone the space and time to be listened to
Just being alongside / silence when appropriate
29. Starting conversations Small group work
30. Take a break Time for Lunch!
31. Dealing with emotional responses: Small group work
32. Recognising Complicated Grief Complicated grief is a form of grief characterised by intense longing and yearning for the person who has died, with recurrent intrusive & distressing thoughts & feelings that make it difficult to move beyond the acute state of mourning and inability to form other relationships or engage in potentially rewarding activities
(Boener & Schulz 2009)
33. Case study : 6months after bereavement Inability to function at work /everyday life
Emotionally detached from significant others/concerns about parenting
Excessive bitterness & anger
Expression of hopelessness
Feeling overwhelmed but no tears
Increased dependence on anti-depressants
34. Case Study: History In care from 2 yrs of age /adopted at 7 yrs
Ambivalent relationship with adoptive parents
Yearning to find birth parents early age
Death of adopted sibling (aged12)
Difficult adolescence: depression & attempted suicide
Long term use of anti-depressants
Ambivalent relationship with significant others
miscarriage / birth of twin daughters (now 11yrs)
Death of adoptive father (sorrow & guilt)
Finding birth mother (aged 41), birth mother killed in RTA 12 months later.
35. Take a break Time for coffee!
36. Bereavement services
& resources:
Signposting & referring on
37. Underlying principles of bereavement care
Respect for the individual
Confidentiality
Recognising & acknowledging the loss
Providing timely information and appropriate support
Conducting conversations and meetings in an appropriate environment
Assessing the need for ongoing support (where appropriate)
Knowing where and when to signpost and/or refer on to another service
(Gloucestershire NHS Bereavement Policy,2010)
38. Services & Resources:what’s available? Written information
Help-lines and websites
Local bereavement support groups & services
Local specialist support
National resources/organisations
39. Local written resources Gloucestershire NHS Bereavement Policy (May 2010)
Liverpool Care Pathway Resource Pack & Guidance sheet
‘What to do after death’ leaflet (available from Department of Work & Pensions)
‘After a death – grieving the loss of someone’ (available from Guide & Pals)
Directory of bereavement services in Gloucestershire ( BIGG)
40. Local services providing bereavement support Includes:
Cruse
GP & other community counselling services
Hospice Bereavement & Counselling services (i.e. Cotswold Care, Great Oaks, Sue Ryder)
Psychological services
Winston’s Wish (support for children)
For further information see the Directory for Bereavement Support in Gloucestershire
41. National Resources NHS Direct: 08454647
Cruse: www.crusebereavementcare.org.uk
WAY Foundation: www.wayfoundation.or.uk
Child Death Helpline: 0800282986
LGBT ( Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender) Bereavement Helpline: 02074035969
British association for counselling and psychotherapy ( 01455 883300 / www.bacp.co.uk)
42. Looking after yourself
My personal ‘First Aid Kit’
At home
At work
Other support networks & activities
43. Personal reflections of learning: from classroom to workplace One thing I’ve learnt about myself today
The most useful/important thing I’ve learnt today?
One thing I’ll do differently at work as a result of attending this workshop
44. References Cruse Gloucestershire (2008)
Boerner K, & Schulz, R, (2009) Care giving, bereavement and complicated grief , Bereavement Care, Vol 28
Dent, A. (2005), Supporting the bereaved : theory and practice , Counselling at Work, Autumn edition
Department of Health (2008), End of Life Care Strategy – promoting high quality care for all adults at the end of life
Freud, S (1917), Mourning and Melancholia. Standard Edition, Vol. 14
Gloucestershire NHS, Gloucestershire NHS Bereavement Policy (2010)
Klass, D., Silverman. S, Nickman, S (Eds.),( 1996) Continuing Bonds: new understandings of grief, Taylor and Francis, Washington
Machin, L (2001), Exploring a framework for understanding the range of response to loss; a study of clients receiving bereavement counselling, Keel University, unpublished, for more information see Relf, M, Machin, L & Archer, N (2008) Guidance for bereavement needs assessment in palliative care (2008), Help the Hospices
National Extension College (1990)
Nice Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) ( 2004) - Guidance on Cancer Services, Improving Supportive Care for Adults with Cancer
Stroebe, M & Schut, H, (1999) The Dual Process Model of Coping with Bereavement: rationale and description, Death Studies, Vol 23 pp 197 -224
Worden, W.J, (1989) Grief Counselling and Grief Therapy, London , Routledge