SUDEP Action, 18, Newbury St., Wantage OX12 8DA, United Kingdom.
SUDEP Action, 18, Newbury St., Wantage OX12 8DA, United Kingdom.
Epilepsy Behav. 2023 Feb;139:109071. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2022.109071. Epub 2023 Jan 2.
This study explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown on people with lived experience of sudden bereavement as a consequence of an epilepsy-related death.
We developed an online survey with fixed choice and open-ended response formats to collect data on grief symptoms and well-being during the pandemic. A total of 275 people bereaved by epilepsy-related deaths between 1980-2020 participated in this study: with 79 participants providing free-text responses for inductive thematic analysis.
In total, 84% of participants reported a bereavement following a sudden death of a person aged under 40, with 22% aged 19 and under. The majority (77% of participants) reported they had been thinking more about the person who died compared to before the COVID-19 outbreak and 54% had experienced more distressing flashbacks to the time of death. Additionally, 61% reported more difficulties falling asleep and staying asleep and 88% of participants reported that the outbreak and response measures had negatively impacted upon their mental health. Medication was being taken for a diagnosed mental health condition by 33% of participants at the time of the study. We categorized these negative experiences during COVID in to four main-themes - 'Family', 'Lifestyle', 'Personal Well-being' and 'Health Services and Shielding Populations'. The 'Personal Well-being' theme was inextricably linked to grief symptoms including 'reflection on the death', 're-exposure to feeling', 'grief', 'salience of sudden deaths in the media' and 'inability to commemorate anniversaries and rituals'. These findings were consistent for bereaved people irrespective of the recency of the death.
This study highlights the impact of the disruption caused by the pandemic on the grief-management of those bereaved by epilepsy-related death. Grief is not static and its management is connected to the psychosocial and formal support structures that were disrupted during the pandemic. The removal of these supports had an adverse effect upon the mental health and well-being of many bereaved. There is an urgent need for a system-wide transformation of epilepsy and mental health services to be inclusive of the needs and experiences of people impacted by sudden deaths in epilepsy and the contribution of the specialist service developed by families and clinicians to meet this gap.
本研究探讨了 COVID-19 大流行和封锁对经历因癫痫相关死亡而突然丧亲的人的影响。
我们开发了一个带有固定选择和开放式回复格式的在线调查,以收集大流行期间的悲伤症状和幸福感数据。共有 275 名 1980 年至 2020 年间因癫痫相关死亡而丧亲的人参加了这项研究:其中 79 人提供了自由文本回复,用于归纳主题分析。
总的来说,84%的参与者报告说,在 COVID-19 爆发之前,他们曾因 40 岁以下的人突然死亡而经历过丧亲之痛,其中 22%的人年龄在 19 岁及以下。大多数(77%的参与者)报告说,他们比 COVID-19 爆发前更多地思考去世的人,54%的人有更多的痛苦回忆。此外,61%的人报告入睡和保持睡眠更困难,88%的参与者报告疫情和应对措施对他们的心理健康产生了负面影响。在研究时,33%的参与者正在服用诊断出的精神健康状况药物。我们将这些在 COVID 期间的负面体验分为四个主要主题——“家庭”、“生活方式”、“个人幸福感”和“卫生服务和保护人群”。“个人幸福感”主题与悲伤症状紧密相关,包括“对死亡的反思”、“再次感受”、“悲伤”、“媒体对突然死亡的关注”和“无法纪念周年纪念日和仪式”。这些发现对最近死亡和很久以前死亡的丧亲者都是一致的。
本研究强调了大流行造成的破坏对癫痫相关死亡丧亲者的悲伤管理的影响。悲伤不是静态的,它的管理与大流行期间中断的社会心理和正式支持结构有关。这些支持的缺失对许多丧亲者的心理健康和幸福感产生了不利影响。迫切需要对癫痫和精神卫生服务进行全系统改革,以满足受癫痫相关突然死亡影响的人和家庭及临床医生开发的专门服务所满足的需求和经验。