Supporting the bereaved families of Armed Forces personnel

A voluntary sector initiative

Authors

  • Jenny Green
  • Paul Cawkill

Abstract

The Armed Forces has a long and established tradition of supporting the families and relatives of personnel who die in service. However, recent events in the Middle East have seen a substantial increase in operational deaths, thereby placing extra demands on existing bereavement support mechanisms. In response to a perceived need, Cruse Bereavement Care secured funding over three years from the Department of Health, to design a bespoke military bereavement support package. The main focus of the support was to train Cruse bereavement volunteers to be conversant in the ways of the military, thereby facilitating a more meaningful and beneficial interaction, be it face-to-face or on the phone. This article documents how the initiative came about and details the foundations of the supplementary support currently in place.

It is followed by a description of how the programme was put into practice by two Cruse volunteers, Beryl Austoni and Hilary Linsey,

References

Cruse 2012 . Cruse Bereavement Care website . Available at www.crusebereavementcare.org.uk/ [accessed 30 August 2012].

Department of Health 2005 . When a patient dies. Advice on developing bereavement services in the NHS . Available at www.dh.gov.uk/publications.

Department of Health 2011 When a person dies .

DASA 2011a . UK Armed Forces Monthly Manning Report at 1 June 2011 . Available at www.dasa.mod.uk [accessed 1 December 2011].

DASA 2011b . DASA Statistical Notice: Deaths in the UK Regular Armed Forces 2010 . Published 31 March 2011 – Revised 1 July 2011. Available at www.dasa.mod.uk [accessed 27 July 2011].

Gould, M, Greenberg, N and Hetherton, J. 2007. Stigma and the military: evaluation of a PTSD psychoeducational program. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 20(4): 1–11.

Langston, V, Greenberg, N, Fear, N, Iversen, A, French, C and Wessely, S. 2010. Stigma and mental health in the Royal Navy: a mixed methods paper. Journal of Mental Health, 19(1): 8–16.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

Spotlight On Practice