Year: 2024 Source: Mortality, (2024). https://doi.org/10.1080/13576275.2023.2298814 SIEC No: 20240102
Exposure to parental suicide or substance-related death can be a risk factor for unwanted developmental trajectories. The stigma and taboo that often follow a death subject to being morally sanctioned in society (‘special deaths’) pose an extra challenge for the surviving child and family. The support of informal and formal networks is an important factor in adaptive coping; however, when the death is not socially recognised, the child’s access to support can be limited. This article presents the results of a systematic literature review seeking to explore children’s access to support when parentally bereaved as the result of suicide or a substance-related death. All six studies included address access to support after a suicide-related death. All studies focus on how children can be supported by loss-oriented activities, particularly how to facilitate open communication between the child and their surroundings. Based on this review, the authors recommend developing research on: 1) support for child survivors in the aftermath of substance-related death, 2), children’s everyday grieving practices, including their access to support for restoration-oriented activities, 3) the effects of social support on mental health outcomes, and 4) to developing research designs that allow for disturbing the phenomena of stigma production.