Full Description
This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of drug-related death bereavement to increase understanding and help direct scientific research, with contributions from across the globe.
It is the first comprehensive, cross-cultural, multidisciplinary review of research on drug-related death (DRD)bereavement. Chapters cover the impact of DRD at individual, family, cultural, and societal levels, and topics include working with, and social support for, families following drug-related loss, understanding grief processes of individuals, drug policy, and the importance of cultural contexts. The book also elaborates on methodological issues when researching DRD.
This handbook will increase understanding of DRD bereavement and contribute to support for DRD bereaved persons and those who care for them professionally and personally. It is essential reading for professionals and academics in the field as well as anyone affected by DRD.
Contents
PART I. SETTING THE STAGE 
1. Introduction to the Handbook 
Margaret Stroebe, Kari Dyregrov and Kristine B. Titlestad 
2. Researching drug-related death bereavement: Methodological suggestions for the study of key conceptual issues 
Eleftheria Tseliou and Georgios Abakoumkin 
3. Drug-related death bereavement: Commentary by a bereaved parent on a research study 
Kelly Thomas, Kristine B. Titlestad, Margaret Stroebe, and Kari Dyregrov 
PART II. CONTEXT: THE SOCIETAL EMBEDDEDNESS OF BEREAVEMENT FOLLOWING A DRUG-RELATED DEATH 
4. The importance of cultural context: A cross-cultural perspective on drug-death bereavement 
Paul C. Rosenblatt 
5. Drug policy and welfare systems as context for drug-related death bereavement 
Svanaug Fjær and Kari Dyregrov 
6. Disenfranchisement following a drug-related death 
Kenneth J. Doka and Kari Dyregrov 
7. The impact of stigmatization before and after drug-related deaths 
Beatrice M. Wendeln, Madeline Oppenheim, Georg Schomerus, Patrick W. Corrigan 
PART III. CONSEQUENCES AND COPING (1): THE BEREAVEMENT EXPERIENCE FOLLOWING A DRUG-RELATED DEATH 
8. Bereaved parents' relationship following drug-related death loss: (What) can we learn from relationship research? 
Asuman Buyukcan-Tetik, Catrin Finkenauer, and Sara Albuquerque 
9. Understanding parental grief on the death of a child who used narcotics 
William T. Feigelman and Kristine B. Titlestad 
10. Risk factors for prolonged grief disorder in people bereaved by drug-related deaths 
Øyvind R. Kalsås and Maja O'Connor 
11. Adjusting to loss after death from drug-related versus other traumatic deaths: Unique challenges? 
Jamison S. Bottomley, William T. Feigelman, and Alyssa A. Rheingold 
12. Coping with bereavement due to drug-related death in the context of one's own drug challenges 
Richard Velleman and Lillian Bruland Selseng 
13. Patterns of coping following a drug-related death: An overview of the END project findings 
Kristine B. Titlestad, Lillian B. Selseng and Kari Dyregrov 
PART IV. CONSEQUENCES AND COPING (2): BEYOND THE WESTERN WORLD 
14. Dealing with bereavement following a drug-related death in China 
Xinxian Liu and Suqin Tang 
15. "Sℇ Asa": Bereavement following bad deaths in Ghana 
Johnny Andoh-Arthur 
16. Bereavement following a drug-related death in Mexico and India 
Richard Velleman, Marcela Tiburcio and Abhijit Nadkarni 
PART V. CARE (1): SUPPORTING BEREAVED PERSONS FOLLOWING A DRUG-RELATED DEATH 
17. Guidance for supporting/counselling people bereaved through a drug-related death: Unique circumstances, special needs 
Peter Cartwright 
18. Working with families following drug-death related loss 
Sari Lindeman and Lillian B. Selseng 
19. On the provision of informal and formal support: From personal networks and colleagues, to schools, front line and health care providers 
Kari Dyregrov, Monika Reime and Sonja Mellingen 
20. Stigma, kindness and professionalism: On fostering compassion and countering stigmatization 
Richard Velleman and Lorna Templeton 
21. Belonging and empowerment: Experiences of community support following a drug-related death 
Joshua Stout and Benjamin Fleury-Steiner 
22. Wall of Silence: Supporting providers after a drug-related death 
Adelya A. Urmanche and Kate Szymanski 
PART VI. CARE (2): TREATMENTS FOR DRUG-RELATED DEATH BEREAVED PERSONS IN NEED 
23. Models of adaptation to bereavement: Application to grief therapy after a drug-related death 
Jamison S. Bottomley and Robert A. Neimeyer 
24. Prolonged Grief Disorder therapy for drug-related death bereaved, with insights from the Dual Process Model 
Henry Willis, Natalia Skritskaya, and M. Katherine Shear 
25. Psychotherapeutic treatment for bereaved persons encountering grief difficulties following a drug-related death 
Jens C. Thimm and Pål Kristensen 
26. Brief Eclectic Psychotherapy for prolonged and traumatic grief following drug-related death 
Geert Smid, Sophie M.C. Hengst, Joanna Wojtkowiak, Rebecca Gasser, and Paul A. Boelen 
27. Structured support for adults bereaved by a drug-related death: The potential of the 5-Step Method 
Lorna Templeton 
28. Rebuilding relationships: The benefits of increasing self-awareness through writing following a drug-related death 
Christina Thatcher 
PART VII. REFLECTIONS 
29. Implications of the END project: Beyond the Norwegian context? 
Monika Reime, Lillian B. Selseng, Kristine B. Titlestad and Kari Dyregrov 
30. The handbook under the magnifying glass: Lessons (still) to be learnt from the study of drug- 
related death bereavement 
Margaret Stroebe, Kari Dyregrov, and Kristine B. Titlestad

              

