13  A rapid evaluation of virtual grief cafés across two national Public Health organisations

J. Verne, N. Bowtell, L. Deacon, Sarah Groom, J. Robson, Alexandra Thackeray
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Abstract

IntroductionRestrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic adversely impacted bereavement as: visiting the dying, funerals, family meetings, access to bereavement services were disrupted. Pandemic work at Public Health England and Test and Trace was unrelenting. Enforced home working enhanced isolation. Many colleagues experienced difficult bereavements with little access to normal support networks.AimsTo further understand how a workplace grassroots virtual grief café can support the bereaved.MethodsA grassroots group of bereaved staff and/or with bereavement expertise, established virtual bereavement cafes in May 2021, run by staff for staff. MS Teams (video teleconferencing, chat, signposting to resources) provided a safe, supportive meeting space. Facilitated Cafés are held fortnightly, with mental health first aiders present. Ground rules emphasised respect, confidentiality, the validity of all types of grief and all deaths (pre or during the pandemic). Chat and emojis offered support. Post café email and phone follow-up was offered. Additional themed cafés supported: Grief Awareness Week, the Queen's death, Pregnancy or Infant loss and bespoke sessions run for teams whose colleague had died. A rapid qualitative thematic evaluation to better understand participants experience of grief and how the cafes have helped was carried out in 2022.ResultsBetween 9–34 staff attend with new participants at each session. All types of grief have been experienced: anticipatory, complicated, cumulative and disenfranchised grief – often in combination. Participants' feedback has been thematically grouped related to their experience of the Grief Cafes, specific workplace challenges, and the impact of the pandemic on grief.ConclusionsThere is a significant level of unresolved and complex grief following the COVID-19 pandemic in working-age people.ImpactVirtual cafes provide critical emotional support in geographically dispersed organisations. They work best linking with and driving compassionate workplace policies.
13对两个国家公共卫生组织的虚拟悲伤卡的快速评估
COVID-19大流行期间的限制对丧亲之痛产生了不利影响,因为:探望死者、葬礼、家庭会议、获得丧亲服务受到干扰。英国公共卫生部和“检测与追踪”的流行病工作毫不松懈。强制在家工作加剧了孤独感。许多同事经历了痛苦的丧亲之痛,几乎无法获得正常的支持网络。目的进一步了解工作场所基层虚拟悲伤咖啡馆如何为丧亲者提供支持。方法2021年5月,一个由丧亲员工和/或具有丧亲专业知识的基层组织建立了虚拟丧亲咖啡馆,由员工为员工经营。MS Teams(视频电话会议、聊天、资源路标)提供了一个安全、支持性的会议空间。每隔两周举行一次便利的cafzen,有精神卫生急救人员在场。基本规则强调尊重、保密、所有类型的悲伤和所有死亡(大流行之前或期间)的有效性。聊天和表情符号提供了支持。提供邮件、电子邮件和电话跟进。支持的其他主题咖啡:悲伤意识周、女王去世、怀孕或婴儿死亡,以及为同事去世的团队举办的定制会议。为了更好地了解参与者的悲伤经历以及咖啡馆如何提供帮助,一项快速定性主题评估于2022年进行。结果每期有9-34名员工和新参与者参加。所有类型的悲伤都经历过:预期的、复杂的、累积的和被剥夺权利的悲伤——通常是结合在一起的。参与者的反馈根据他们在“悲伤咖啡馆”的经历、具体的工作挑战以及疫情对悲伤的影响进行了主题分组。结论2019冠状病毒病大流行后,劳动年龄人群中存在大量未解决的复杂悲伤。影响虚拟咖啡馆为地理位置分散的组织提供关键的情感支持。他们最好与富有同情心的工作场所政策联系在一起,并推动这些政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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