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Articles

Funerals, memorials and bereavement care

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Pages 62-67 | Published online: 20 Nov 2019
 

ABSTRACT

A population survey finds that bereaved people draw upon diverse sources of support in their communities, from both formal services and informal networks of care. The formal service most frequently recognised by participants is provided by funeral directors. We outline some reasons for this, and explore one particular theme, memorialisation, in which funeral providers have traditionally been a lead discipline. Significant changes in memorialisation over recent decades challenge today’s funeral industry, but also draw our attention to underlying social changes reshaping our understanding not only of bereavement care but of care in general. Bereavement support is most effective when provided collaboratively by formal and informal care providers, but collaboration is challenged by policies that continue to privilege formal services over informal care. This challenge of developing constructive, respectful and complementary collaborations between formal and informal care is not peculiar to bereavement care, but is a social policy imperative for contemporary societies.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge the financial support of the Australasian Cemeteries and Crematoria Association (ACCA).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Bruce Rumbold

Jennifer Lowe

Samar M Aoun

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