| Literature DB >> 28644859 |
Katja Linde1, Julia Treml1, Jana Steinig1, Michaela Nagl1, Anette Kersting1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adaption to the loss of a loved one due to suicide can be complicated by feelings of guilt, shame, responsibility, rejection, and stigmatization. Therefore people bereaved by suicide have an increased risk for developing complicated grief which is related to negative physical and mental disorders and an increased risk for suicidal behavior. Grief interventions are needed for this vulnerable population. The aim of this systematic review was to provide an overview of the current state of evidence concerning the effectiveness of interventions that focus on grief for people bereaved by suicide.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28644859 PMCID: PMC5482439 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0179496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Barlow et al. (2010) | Constantino & Bricker (1996) | Constantino et al. (2001) | De Groot et al. (2010) | Farberow (1992) | Kovac & Range (2000) | Wittouck et. al (2014) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria | 1. Clients ≥18 years | NR | 1. Survive the suicide of a spouse | 1. First degree relatives or spouses of people who had died by suicide | NR | 1. Loss of a loved one to suicide in the past two years | 1. Loss of a loved one to suicide in the past 3 months to 2 years |
| Sample size | Total: 19 | Total: 32 | Total: 60 | Total: 122 | Total: 82 | Total: 42 | Total: 83 |
| I: 19, C: None | I:16, C:16 | I: NR, C: NR | I: 68, C: 54 | I: 60, C: 22 | I: 20, C: 22 | I: 47, C: 36 | |
| Age (years) | M = 46.9 (SD = 10) Range: 26 to 66 | M = 43 | Range: 24–70 | NSI: M = 43 (SD = 14.1), SI: M = 42 (SD = 12.1) | 77% between 20 and 49 Range: 10 to over 60 | M = 24.0, SD = 7.3; Range: 18–46 | M = 48.6, SD = 13.3 |
| Men N (%) | 3 (18.8) | Minority | 10 (21.3) | 40 (32.8) | 23 (28.0) | 9 (21.4) | 20 (24.1) |
| Women N (%) | 13 (81.3) | Majority | 37 (78.7) | 82 (67.2) | 59 (72.0) | 33 (78.6) | 63 (75.9) |
| Relationship to deceased | Mixed: wife, husband, father, son, sister, common-law-husband | Spouses or partners | Spouses or partners | Mixed: 29.5% spouse, 23.8% parent, 22.1% child, 17.2% sibling, 7.4% in-law/other | Mixed: spouse, sweetheart, parent, child, sibling,other | Not reported | Mixed: 24.1% partner, 9.6% parent, 39.7% child, 18.1% sibling, 8.5% other |
| Time since bereavement | 6 weeks to 20 years, 75% reporting deaths within the past 5 years | Not reported. | M = 10.9 (SD = 8.7), range: 1 to 27 month | Not explicitly stated; assumed to be less than 2.5 months | Less than 3 to over 24 months, 77% reporting deaths within the past 8 months | I: 13.3 (SD = 9.32) monthsC: 12.0 (SD = 6.5) months | M = 11.0 (SD = 6.1) months, Range: 3 months to 2 years |
| Characteristics of intervention | Peer support program | Bereavement group postvention | Bereavement group postvention | Family-based grief counseling program using cognitive- behavioral therapy | Bereavement group program | Writing therapy | CBT-based psychoeducational intervention |
| Type of intervention | Group intervention | Group intervention | Group intervention | Group intervention | Group intervention | Individual | Individual or group intervention |
| Duration | 4 months | 8 weeks | 8 weeks | NR | 8 weeks | 2 weeks | NR |
| Frequency of contact | Not reported. Average duration 96.8 minutes. | Once a week with a duration of 1.5 hours | Once a week with a duration of 1.5 hours | 4 sessions every 2 to 3 weeks with a duration of 2 hours | Once a week with a duration of 1.5 hours | 4 sessions with a duration of 15 minutes | 4 times with a duration of 2 hours |
| Implemented by | Trained volunteer peer supporters | Trained leader with a master’s degree in mental health nursing | Trained leader with a master’s degree in mental health nursing | Experienced psychiatric nurse | Mental health professional and trained survivor | Researcher | Clinical Psychologist |
| Characteristics of Comparison group | No comparison group | Social group postvention | Social group postvention | No intervention | No intervention or those who dropped out after one session | Writing Group | No intervention |
I = Intervention group. C = Comparison group. NR = not reported. SI = Suicide Ideators. NSI = Non Suicide Ideators.
a Canadian Mental Health Organization.
b No information about total sample available.
c Refers to n = 16 participants who are completers.
d No details reported.
e Refers to n = 47 participants who are completers.
f No frequencies reported.
Description of grief measures.
| Instrument (author, year of publication) | Included in | Type/ number of items/ scale/ reference period | Scales /Subscales | Reliability/Validity | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grief Cognitions Questionnaire (GCQ) (Boelen et al., 2003) | Wittouck et al. (2014) | questionnaire/38/ 6-point rating scale/NR | 9 subscales: global negative beliefs about the self, the world, life, future, negative cognitions about self-blame, other people`s response s after the loss, appropriateness of grief reactions, cognitions reflecting the importance of cherishing the pain of the loss, threatening interpretations of one`s own reactions to the loss | .81 ≤ α ≤ .95/ Construct, convergent, discriminative validity shown [ | Uncomplicated grief |
| Grief Experiences Inventory (GEI) (Sanders et al., 1985) | Constantino & Bricker (1996); Constantino et al. (2001) | questionnaire /135/ 2-point rating scale/ NR | 1 total scale and 9 subscales: Despair, Anger/Hostility, Guilt, Social Isolation, Loss of Control, Rumination, Depersonalization, Somatization, Death Anxiety | .52 ≤ rtt ≤ .85/ NR [ | Uncomplicated grief |
| Grief Experience Questionnaire (GEQ) (Barrett & Scott, 1989) | Kovac & Range (2000) | questionnaire/55/ 5-point Likert scale/the first two years after the death | 1 total scale and 11 subscales: Somatic reaction, general grief reaction, search for explanations, loss of social support, stigmatization, guilt, responsibility, shame, rejection, self-destructive behavior, unique reactions | .76 ≤ α ≤ .97/ Discriminative validity shown [ | Suicide-specific aspects grief |
| Grief Recovery Questionnaire (GRQ), (Lehmann et al. 1986; Lehmann et al., 1987) | Kovac & Range (2000) | questionnaire | 1 total scale | Not reported originally but Kovac & Range (2000) reported | Uncomplicated grief |
| Hogan Grief Reaction Checklist (Hogan et al., 2001) | Barlow et al. (2010) | questionnaire/61/ 5-point Likert scale/past two weeks, including today | 6 subscales: Despair, Panic Behavior, Personal Growth, Blame and Anger, Detachment, Disorganization | .79 ≤ α ≤ .90; .56 ≤ rtt ≤ .85/ Construct, convergent & divergent validity shown [ | Uncomplicated grief |
| Inventory of Traumatic Grief (ITG), (Prigerson et al., 1995; Dutch Version Boelen et al. 2003) | De Groot et al., (2010); Wittouck et al. (2014) | questionnaire/29/ 5-point Likert scale/ the last months | 1 total scale: maladaptive grief | α = .94, rtt = .92/ Construct, discriminative, concurrent validity shown [ | Complicated grief |
| Traumatic Grief Evaluation of Response to Loss (TRGR2L) (Prigerson & Jacobs, 2001) | De Groot et al., (2010) | structured interview/NR/ 5-point rating scale for frequency and intensity of each symptom/ NR | Diagnosis of maladaptive grief reaction based on consensus criteria of traumatic grief. If at least one item was scored above two on both the frequency and intensity rating a maladaptive grief reaction was present. | Kappa = 0.71/ Criterion-related validity shown | Complicated grief |
NR = Not reported, α = Cronbachs`Alpha, rtt = test-retest reliability.
a developed as an interview.
Methodological quality of included studies.
| Barlow et al.(2010) | Constantino & Bricker (1996) | Constantino et al. (2001) | De Groot et al. (2010) | Farberow (1992) | Kovac & Range (2000) | Wittouck et. al (2014) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Representative? | Not likely | Not likely | Not likely | Somewhat likely | Not likely | Somewhat likely | Not likely |
| Percentage agreement | 60–79% | 80–100% | Can`t tell | Less than 60% | Can`t tell | 60–79% | 80–100% |
| Study Design | Cohort (one group pre and post) | RCT | RCT | Secondary analyses of an RCT | Cohort analytic (two groups pre and post) | Controlled Clinical trial | RCT |
| Described as randomized? | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Method of randomization described? | N.A. | Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | No | Yes |
| Method appropriate? | N.A. | Yes | Yes | Yes | N.A. | N.A. | Yes |
| N.A. | |||||||
| Important pre-intervention differences? | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
| Percentage confounders controlled for? | N.A | N.A | 0–100% | Less than 60% | Less than 60% | 80–100% | |
| Outcome assessor described as blinded? | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No |
| Participants blinded? | No | Can`t tell | Can`t tell | Can`t tell | Can`t tell | Yes | Can`t tell |
| Measures valid? | Yes | Can`t tell | Can`t tell | Yes | No | No | Yes |
| Measures reliable? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Number and reasons reported per group? | No | Can`t tell | No | Yes | Can`t tell | Yes | Yes |
| Percentage completing study? | Less than 60% | 80–100% | 60–79% | 80–100% | Can`t tell | Less than 60% | 80–100% |
| No | No | Can`t tell | Yes | Yes | No | No |
1 Refers to the % of subjects in the control and intervention group that agreed to participate in the study before they were assigned to intervention or control group.
2 described in De Groot et al. (2007), RCT = randomized controlled trial
Fig 2Summary of the included studies without a comparison group.
Fig 3Summary of the included studies with an inactive comparison group.
Fig 4Summary of the included studies with an active comparison group.