Death by suicide is a manifold catastrophe, as the bereaved can attest. The experience of those bereaved by suicide cries out for more attention, both from research and from clinical perspectives. In this volume led by Drs. Jordan and McIntosh, this call is answered, with rigor, compassion, and wisdom, and from essential perspectives ranging from the international, to the impact on youth, to the impact on caregivers. - Thomas Joiner, PhD, The Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Florida State University
In this book, John Jordan and John McIntosh offer clinicians a resource of great value.While the field often offers lip service to the phrase evidence-based, Jordan and McIntosh deliver a work that integrates theory, research, and sound clinical acumen. This book will become the essential resource for understanding suicide and assisting survivors of all ages in coping with the aftermath. - Kenneth J. Doka, PhD, Professor, The College of New Rochelle; Senior Consultant, The Hospice Foundation of America
This book is a cornucopia of rigorous scholarship and practical clinical guidance on bereavement and grief after suicide. The authors' incisive writing styles are engaging and their chapters unfold as a coherent narrative of the complex aftermath of suicide. This comprehensive text will stimulate the theoretician, enlighten the empirical researcher, and enliven the clinician. - Ted Rynearson, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of Washington; Medical Director, Virginia Mason Separation & Loss Service, Seattle, Washington
This much needed volume is a 'tour de force' in suicide bereavement! The editors have assembled world experts whose review of the published literature is encyclopedic in breadth yet manageable and illuminating for the reader. Their up-to-date descriptions of established US and international support programs are invaluable as are their incisive directives for future research and individual and programmatic resources for survivors. - Michael F Myers, MD, Professor of Clinical Psychiatry, SUNY Downstate Medical Center; Co-Author (with Carla Fine), Touched By Suicide: Hope and Healing After Loss
The publication of this comprehensive book is a recognition that the long-neglected field of bereavement after suicide has reached a level of sophisticated evidence, experience and expertise. The book successfully assembles and draws together the various themes and threads relating to the nature and course of grief after suicide, and the array of options for providing support to those bereaved by suicide. - Annette Beautrais PhD, Senior Research Scientist, Yale University School of Medicine; Professor, University of Otago, Christchurch, New Zealand
People undoubtedly have been taking their lives since the dawn of mankind, yet our understanding of the trauma suicide has on those intimately and directly affected has received scant scholarly attention and, at that, only in the last half century. This book represents a sea change in that history. Jordan and McIntosh bring years of compassion and scholarship to the topic and offer us both fresh perspective and a challenge to move toward a more meaningful clinical and research understanding of this long-neglected experience. This is a pioneering effort and a most significant piece of scholarship. - Lanny Berman, PhD, ABPP, Executive Director, American Association of Suicidology
...a MUST book to read and keep in your professional library...this book is a rich bearer of resource information that will serve you well... It is academic, clinical, resourceful and personal...Nothing would distract me from recommending this book. I believe it will set a new standard for understanding, comfort, and restoration...The book is excellent, a must for your library, and it does a superb job of advocating for the mourner. - Richard B. Gilbert, Ph.d., in Illness, Crisis & Loss
[The authors] intertwine research and practice in ways that would be genuinely helpful to researchers as well as clinicians....the writing is strong and compelling....a wonderful resource....clear organization enhances the appeal.... As a reviewer, would I recommend this book to researchers? Would I recommend it to professionals working with individuals bereaved from suicide? Am I glad I read it myself? The answer to all these questions is a resounding yes. - Lillian Range, PsycCRITIQUES