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Journal Article

Citation

Feigelman B, Feigelman W. Illn. Crises Loss 2011; 19(1): 57-71.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.2190/IL.19.1.e

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This two-part report examines important aspects of survivor of suicide support groups: some of the motivating factors attracting survivors to join these groups and why many withdraw as time after a loss passes. From a variety of data sources, including survey data collected from 462 parents losing a child to suicide, participant observation data (collected over a 7-year period from more than 200 suicide survivors observed at monthly group meetings) and from follow-up interviews with 24 respondents withdrawing from groups, we investigate the above questions. In this first part, we focus on motivating factors leading suicide-bereaved individuals to participate in support groups and explore several hypotheses associated with participation: conventional religious involvements, family size differences, perceived grief and psychological distress, and help received from bereavement professionals. The present study did not confirm the research-based expectation that support group members would be more distressed than their less active counterparts. © 2011, Baywood Publishing Co., Inc.


Language: en

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