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Dying & bereavement
Bereavement due to suicide
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Before the suicide :
People’s perceptions of why the suicide took place
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Soon after the suicide :
Finding out
First reactions-shock, disbelief, despair & relief
Changing emotions-sadness, guilt & anger
Seeing the body or not being able to do so
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The funeral, inquest, burial or cremation :
The funeral or commemoration
Burying the body or scattering or burying ashes
The headstone or other memorial
The inquest
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Sources of help :
Informal support - Family and friends
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Help from Cruse Bereavement Care
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Coping with grief and keeping memories alive
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Life now and a message to others :
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Bereavement due to suicide
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Dying & bereavement
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Bereavement due to suicide
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Lost a parent
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Gillian - Interview 37
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Gillian’s father asked Dignitas to help him die in a dignified manner. He died a peaceful death in Zurich with his wife and two children by his bedsi
Gillian’s father, aged 84, had an incurable disease. His motor neurone function was getting progressively worse. He needed constant care, and wanted an assisted death. In 2008 his family took him to Switzerland, where Dignitas helped him to die.
Dying & bereavement
>>
Bereavement due to suicide
>>
Lost a parent
>>
Gillian - Interview 37
>>
Gillian felt glad that her father had been able to die at a time of his choosing, listening to classical music, with his family beside him.
Gillian’s father, aged 84, had an incurable disease. His motor neurone function was getting progressively worse. He needed constant care, and wanted an assisted death. In 2008 his family took him to Switzerland, where Dignitas helped him to die.
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