What elements of a systems' approach to bereavement are most effective in times of mass bereavement? A narrative systematic review with lessons for COVID-19
Supporting technical documents that are social systems-relevant
Not usually available for this document type
Full-text report
Scientific Abstract
Scientific Abstract
Recency, quality and context of the findings
Last year literature searched
2020
Year Published
2020
Quality Rating
8/9 (AMSTAR rating from ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è Health Forum)
Countries in which studies (included in the synthesis) were conducted
Norway (3); USA (2); Sweden (1)
Global/regional focus
WHO - Americas region<br />WHO - European region<br />
Country focus
Norway (3); USA (2); Sweden (1)
Low - and middle-income country (LMIC) focus
Additional details about the research
Type of document
Systematic review of effects
Type of question
Effectiveness
Focus
General
Target
Not yet available
Domain
Programs and services
Community and social services
Emergency response and preparedness
Sustainable Development Goals
3. Good health and well-being (partially covered)
17. Partnerships for the goals
Social system topic(s)
Governance arrangements
Policy authority
Centralization/decentralization of policy authority
Delivery arrangements
How services are designed to meet citizens’ needs
Culturally appropriate services
Package of services/service pathways
By whom services are provided
Staff - Training
Implementation strategies
Citizen-targeted strategy
Information or education provision
(Personal) Support
Theme
Optimal aging
Publication details
Citation
Harrop E, Mann M, Semedo L, Chao D, Selman LE, Byrne A. What elements of a systems' approach to bereavement are most effective in times of mass bereavement? A narrative systematic review with lessons for COVID-19. Palliative Medicine. 2020;34(9):1165-1181.