Bereavement

This information is for anyone who has been bereaved, their family and friends, and anyone else who wants to learn more.

On this page you will find information about:

  • how people normally grieve after a loss
  • unresolved grief
  • places to get help
  • other sources of information
  • how friends and relatives can help.

About our information

We publish information to help people understand more about mental health and mental illness, and the kind of care they are entitled to.

Our information isn't a substitute for personalised medical advice from a doctor or other qualified healthcare professional. We encourage you to speak to a medical professional if you need more information or support. Please read our disclaimer.

Bereavement is a distressing but common experience. Most of us, at some time in our life, will experience the death or loss of someone we love.

Yet in our everyday life we think and talk about death very little, perhaps because we encounter it less often than our previous generation did. For them, the death of a brother or sister, friend or relative, was a common part of life in childhood, or during the teenage years. For us, these losses usually happen later in life. So, we do not have the chance to learn about grieving - how it feels, what are the right things to do, what is 'normal'. And we don’t have the experience of coming to terms with it.

Despite this, we must cope when we are finally faced with the loss of someone we love. We are all individuals and have our own ways of grieving – but there are experiences that most of us share while grieving.

Credits

This information was produced by the Royal College of Psychiatrists' Public Engagement Editorial Board.

Series Editor: Dr Philip Timms
Series Manager: Thomas Kennedy
Expert review: Dr Manoj Rajagopal


Published: Mar 2020

© Royal College of Psychiatrists