Exploring bereavement from a new perspective 

 

NHS Education for Scotland’s 3rd national bereavement education conference took place on Thursday 24th November 2022. It attracted interest from a wide range of delegates, with registrations from over 1000 health and social care staff. Feedback from those who attended was extremely positive. 

On this page you can catch up on the day’s events and sessions. You may also be interested to explore #NESBereavement2022 

Programme

Click here or on the image on the right-hand side to view the programme

Explore the conference sessions

Below you can find short film clips from many conference speakers which were recorded ahead of the event. These provide an overview of key learning points from each session. Presentation slides from selected sessions are also available below.  

Plenary Sessions

Bereavement is everyone’s business - the future of bereavement support in Scotland

The Right Reverend and Right Honourable Dame Sarah Mullally DBE, The Bishop of London and Chair of the Bereavement Commission and Dr Donald Macaskill, Chief Executive, Scottish Care and Bereavement Commissioner for Scotland

This plenary session shared the insights and the learning from the findings of the UK Commission on Bereavement. It focused on the recommendations for each nation, in particular for Scotland. To read about the Commission's findings, please click here.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

Slides to accompany the session from each speaker can be viewed here:

A transcript of this video can be found here

Reflections on national grief and mourning following the death of Queen Elizabeth II

The Right Reverend Dr Iain Greenshields, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland

 

This session was pre-recorded for the conference and as such, is available to view in full. In his presentation, the Right Reverend Dr Iain Greenshields shared his insights on the effect of the death of the Queen on the nation.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

Blessing or Curse? Bereavement & Digital Legacies

Professor Elaine Kasket, Counselling Psychologist and Author

 

Professor Kasket notes that 'Professionals of all stripes often lack confidence and competence in sensitively and constructively handling the wide-ranging and complex digital aspects of death, which include technologically mediated grief, virtual memorialising, and experiences with unpleasant or traumatic situations or incidents involving access to, control over, or assaults upon digital assets and legacy'. This conference session aimed to help delegates better understand the principles and practicalities around digital remains.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

The Value of Listening 

Brigid Russell, Coach and Consultant

 

Brigid reflected on her personal experiences of grief, the power of listening and being able to talk about illness, loss and grief.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Morning Parallel Workshops

Grief when there is no bereavement: exploring loss in the context of infertility

Professor Abha Maheshwari, Consultant in Reproductive Medicine, Director & Person Responsible, Aberdeen Fertility Centre

 

There are several scenarios when bereavement support is not available as it does not fit in traditional understanding of bereavement. It is important that these are recognised and people are supported. Professor Maheshwari discussed how these can be recognised and individualised support can be provided.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

 A transcript of this video can be found here

Traumatic bereavement in children and young people

Dr David Trickey, Consultant Clinical Psychologist and Co-Director, UK Trauma Council 

This workshop looked at the way that traumatic events can colour a child or young person’s views of the world, themselves and others, and the way that memories for traumatic events unlike memories for other events, are intrusive, vivid and distressing. Dr Trickey considered how for some children and young people, the traumatic nature of the death of a loved one can obstruct or derail the more natural grieving process. It’s difficult to grieve the loss of someone by remembering their life, if the memories of their death keep getting in the way. Finally the session explored what the evidence says can help a child or young person ‘process’ the event of the death, so that they can start to grieve their loss.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Slides to accompany the session can be viewed here

Unexpected Death - An Emergency Department perspective

Dr Katherine Ritchie, Consultant in Emergency Medicine, NHS Grampian / Julie McWilliam, Emergency Department Senior Staff Nurse, NHS Grampian / Suzanne Edwicker, Emergency Department Porter, NHS Grampian / Sarah Black, Physician Associate, St George's Hospital Emergency Department, London

 

Although death in the Emergency Department is not uncommon, the majority of the time it is unexpected. This can be difficult for relatives, clinicians and the wider ED team (e.g. Porters, Reception Staff, Domestic Staff), and they may encounter distressing or traumatic scenes they did not feel prepared for. In this session, a panel of ED team members discussed these experiences and how they deal with such events.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Supporting those who are bereaved following substance use

Martha Rae, Senior Virtual Family Support Practitioner, Scottish Families Affected by Alcohol and Drugs

 

This workshop focused on the additional complications of grief following substance use, what all substance related deaths have in common and what we can do to support someone who has lost someone to alcohol or drugs. It had a particular focus around the role of stigma in preventing people accessing support and increasing the feeling of isolation following a death.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

Slides to accompany the session can be viewed here

 

A transcript of this video can be found here

Creating more bereavement-friendly workplaces

Rebecca Patterson, Director of Good Life, Good Death, Good Grief, Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care; Alison Bunce, Programme Lead, Compassionate Inverclyde/Inverclyde Cares; Jen Somerville, Development Coordinator, Child Bereavement UK

This session looked at different approaches to making workplaces more supportive for people who are bereaved and grieving. Speakers discussed how people can be affected by bereavement at work and the practical support measures that can be put in place by managers, Human Resources teams and employees themselves. The speakers also highlighted their work with employers in Inverclyde in adopting the Bereavement Charter Mark in their organisations.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Slides to accompany the session can be viewed here

Bereavement support through companioning: A spiritual care approach

Maureen O'Neill, Director, Faith in Older People and Ruth Aird, Research Associate, Faith in Older People

 

This workshop considered different scenarios around the spiritual dimension and companioning.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

Slides to accompany the session can be viewed here

A transcript of this video can be found here

 

 

Afternoon Parallel Workshops

The impact of premature death in homelessness 

Dr Johanna Reilly, GP, Access Practice, NHS Lothian and Doneil Macleod, Mental Health Nurse, Access Practice, NHS Lothian 

This session looked at the risk factors and causes of premature death among those who are homeless, including illustrative case studies. 

Death in Custody - Supporting those affected by bereavement in prison

Rev Jill Clancy, Prison Chaplain, HMP Barlinnie, Glasgow

Your loved one has died and you cannot be with them, you couldn't say goodbye, you can't grieve and you have to go to the funeral handcuffed to strangers. How do you cope? You open a door like any normal day but you don't know what is going to be behind it. Dealing with death at work, colleagues and families. Drink, Drugs, Anger, Emptiness, Rage, Murder, Mental Health....How to cope with unprocessed grief.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

Slides to accompany the session can be viewed here

A transcript of this video can be found here

Creating a humanities resource bank for bereavement - pointing to writing, poems, art and movies

Dr Neil Turner, Professor of Nephrology, University of Edinburgh and Dr Eleri Williams, Consultant in General Medicine and Nephrology, St John's Hospital, Livingston

 

People often resort to writing, music, art, poems, video or movies to help them with bereavement, as can staff, to help them cope with work stress. The Scottish Medical Humanities site has examples at: 

During this session, small groups discussed examples of different works that could be useful, why, and how they might be presented and used.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Faith, cultural and spiritual considerations after death where an early burial is required

Dr C George M Fernie Senior Medical Reviewer and Caldicott Guardian Appraisal Lead, National Services Scotland and Partner Organisations, Death Certification Review Service, Healthcare Improvement Scotland, Ephraim Borowski, Director, Scottish Council of Jewish Communities, Fiona Blair, Senior Registrar Births, Deaths, Marriages & Civil Partnerships, Association of Registrars of Scotland and Cathy Dunlop, Senior Registrar Births, Deaths, Marriages & Civil Partnerships Association of Registrars of Scotland

In this session, four speakers discussed advance registration of death, which allows the funeral to be carried out before the review of the Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (MCCD) is complete. Applications for advance registration are considered in special circumstances such as:

  • religious or cultural reasons (such as faith requirements to bury a person's body quickly)
  • compassionate reasons (where delays could cause significant and unnecessary distress) or, 
  • practical or administrative reasons (for example, family have travelled from abroad to attend the funeral)

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

A transcript of this video can be found here

Anticipatory Grief - exploring how we can be affected before a person dies

Dr Paul Baughan, GP/National Clinical Advisor for Ageing & Health, Scottish Government, Dr Gemma Edwards, ST6 Neonatal Trainee, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde and Dr Fariel Rahman, Consultant in Community Child Health & Neurodisability, NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde


This session featured a range of speakers looking at how we can be impacted by grief and loss even before a person’s death due a variety of different circumstances and life events. Known as anticipatory grief, this may affect people at different stages of their lives – the session featured experiences of e.g. a parent whose baby or child has a life-limiting condition or illness. Speakers discussed the impact this can have on people, and looked at ways of providing support to those affected.

Click on the image to watch the video or here to view it on the NHS Education for Scotland Vimeo channel

 

A transcript of this video can be found here

Posters

Click here to view all the conference posters which will be available until November 2023.  

  • WINNER: ‘The Bereavement Charter Mark for Employers – a pilot in Inverclyde’ from Rebecca Patterson (Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care), Alison Bunce (Inverclyde Cares) and Jennifer Somerville (Child Bereavement UK)
  • HIGHLY COMMENDED: ‘Advancing Palliative Care practice in end-of-life care, death and bereavement’ from Kerys Russell (NHS Fife)