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Postvention

Postvention is a set of interventions conducted after a suicide or other traumatic death to support those affected and to prevent additional harms, including future suicides. It sits within the broader field of suicide prevention and is distinct from prevention (reducing risk before a crisis) and intervention (addressing ongoing risk). Postvention efforts involve mental health professionals, schools, workplaces, media, and community organizations and may begin with immediate crisis response and extend into longer-term bereavement support.

Common activities include outreach to families and friends, risk assessment for relatives and survivors, provision of

Evidence for postvention's impact is varied but suggests that well-planned postvention can reduce distress, improve access

grief
counseling
or
referral
to
services,
and
the
facilitation
of
support
groups.
Educational
resources
about
normal
and
complicated
grief,
coping
strategies,
and
crisis
warning
signs
are
offered,
along
with
careful
coordination
of
memorial
practices
that
are
respectful
of
cultural
and
religious
beliefs.
Media
guidelines
aim
to
minimize
sensational
reporting
and
imitation
risks.
Effective
postvention
also
involves
collaborating
with
local
agencies,
religious
communities,
and
schools
to
ensure
continuity
of
care
and
confidentiality.
to
mental
health
services,
and
potentially
lower
subsequent
suicide
risk
among
the
bereaved.
Guidelines
and
frameworks
have
been
developed
by
organizations
such
as
the
World
Health
Organization,
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention,
and
suicide-prevention
nonprofits,
and
are
applied
in
settings
ranging
from
schools
to
workplaces
to
communities
after
mass
or
individual
suicides.