Literature DB >> 8176653

The healing process for the multidisciplinary team: recovering post-inpatient suicide.

J K Bultema1.   

Abstract

1. With an inpatient suicide, the staff may experience grief for a variety of reasons. The staff member's perception of self as a competent mental health care provider may be destroyed. The caregiver may grieve the loss of an ideal. Some inpatient staff members mistakenly believe that suicide can always be prevented and that the multidisciplinary team can accurately assess all patients. 2. To successfully mourn a loss, Worden (1982) identified four tasks of grieving that must be completed: accept the reality of the loss; experience the pain of grief; adjust to an environment in which the deceased or lost object is missing; and withdraw emotional energy and reinvest it in another relationship. 3. Interventions to promote healing post-inpatient suicide must be aimed at individual caregivers and the multidisciplinary team. Individual caregivers will differ in their responses based on experiences, beliefs, values, and culture.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8176653     DOI: 10.3928/0279-3695-19940201-06

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv        ISSN: 0279-3695            Impact factor:   1.098


  2 in total

1.  Accounting for accountability: a discourse analysis of psychiatric nurses' experience of a patient suicide.

Authors:  Maggie Robertson; Brodie Paterson; Billy Lauder; Rosemary Fenton; John Gavin
Journal:  Open Nurs J       Date:  2010-01-27

2.  Bereavement after the suicide of a significant other.

Authors:  Maurizio Pompili; Amresh Shrivastava; Gianluca Serafini; Marco Innamorati; Mariantonietta Milelli; Denise Erbuto; Federica Ricci; Dorian A Lamis; Paolo Scocco; Mario Amore; David Lester; Paolo Girardi
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 1.759

  2 in total

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