Unpacking the Meaning of Closeness, Reconsidering the Concept of Impact in Suicide Exposure, and Expanding Beyond Bereavement: "Just, I Hope You Don't Forget About Us".
Rebecca L SanfordLaura M FreyNeetika ThindBrock ButcherMyfanwy MaplePublished in: Omega (2023)
Suicide exposure research has relied on samples of treatment-seeking kin, resulting in an attachment-based model centering bereavement as the most significant form of impact and obscuring other forms of significant and life-altering impact. From a community-based sample ( N = 3010) exposed to suicide, we examine a subset ( n = 104) with perceived high impact from the death yet low reported closeness to the person who died and analyze qualitative comments ( n = 50). On average and out of 5.00, participants rated closeness as 1.56 but impact of death as 4.51. We illustrate dimensions of low closeness and identify themes on the meaning of impact: impact through society and systemic circumstances, impact through history and repeated exposure, impact through other people, impact as a motivator for reflection or change, and impact through shared resonance. Participants reported impact of death as significant or devastating, yet none of their comments reflected experiences typical of bereavement.