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2021 | 8 | 2 | 221-235

Article title

Wpływ samobójstwa i samobójstwa wspomaganego na przeżywanie żałoby przez pozostawionych

Content

Title variants

EN
The Influence of Suicide and Assisted Suicide on the Bereavement of Suicide Survivors

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
Suicide is still one of the most stigmatized types of death, arousing controversy. There exists its special type: assisted suicide in which a one kills themselves with the help of another person. It is very interesting to compare the psychological consequences of these two forms of death for the suicide survivors – that is, the relatives of the ones who took their own lives. While there are many similarities between suicide and assisted suicide, certain "technical differences" between them can significantly affect the later functioning of the survivors. In the case of "ordinary" suicide, we distinguish factors that make it difficult to survive bereavement, while assisted suicide may sometimes also have a facilitating effect on this process. The literature review shows that suicide survivors experience a higher sense of guilt (exacerbated by sometimes felt relief), anger, abandonment and responsibility, and lower support and acceptance than the relatives of other deceased. Interestingly, they do not necessarily suffer from mental disorders more often, but they are more stigmatized and feel the need to hide the circumstances of their loved ones’ death. People left after the assisted suicide also sometimes experience emotions such as relief and a sense of abandonment, they tend to distance themselves from others and hide the truth about the death of their loved ones (in this case also because of the fear of legal consequences). The most significant differences, important for the later experience of bereavement, are the possibility of saying goodbye, as well as the belief that they provided their loved ones the "good death". These factors make it much easier to mourn, reduce the traumatic experience of grief. However, there are other factors potentially complicating bereavement – research shows that assisting in suicide correlates with certain mental disorders. This may be, for example, because of ethical doubts that this practice raises, conflict with the value system, potential remorse, alienation from the community after condemning such an act, fear of legal consequences and doubts if assisting in a suicide was a right decision.

Year

Volume

8

Issue

2

Pages

221-235

Physical description

Dates

published
2021

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
2029526

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-2719-8278-year-2021-volume-8-issue-2-article-102ae62a-9f78-3ef6-9013-29f0ac465dbd
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