PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Caroline Pearce AU - Jonathan R Honey AU - Roberta Lovick AU - Nicola Zapiain Creamer AU - Claire Henry AU - Andy Langford AU - Mark Stobert AU - Stephen Barclay TI - ‘A silent epidemic of grief’: a survey of bereavement care provision in the UK and Ireland during the COVID-19 pandemic AID - 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046872 DP - 2021 Mar 01 TA - BMJ Open PG - e046872 VI - 11 IP - 3 4099 - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e046872.short 4100 - http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e046872.full SO - BMJ Open2021 Mar 01; 11 AB - Objectives To investigate the experiences and views of practitioners in the UK and Ireland concerning changes in bereavement care during the COVID-19 pandemic.Design Online survey using a snowball sampling approach.Setting Practitioners working in hospitals, hospices, care homes and community settings across the UK and Ireland.Participants Health and social care professionals involved in bereavement support.Interventions Brief online survey distributed widely across health and social care organisations.Results 805 respondents working in hospice, community, and hospital settings across the UK and Ireland completed the survey between 3 August and 4 September 2020. Changes to bereavement care practice were reported in: the use of telephone, video and other forms of remote support (90%); supporting people bereaved from non-COVID conditions (76%), from COVID-19 (65%) and people bereaved before the pandemic (61%); funeral arrangements (61%); identifying bereaved people who might need support (56%); managing complex forms of grief (48%) and access to specialist services (41%). Free-text responses demonstrated the complexities and scale of the impact on health and social care services, practitioners and their relationships with bereaved families, and on bereaved people.Conclusions The pandemic has created major challenges for the support of bereaved people: increased needs for bereavement care, transition to remote forms of support and the stresses experienced by practitioners, among others. The extent to which services are able to adapt, meet the escalating level of need and help to prevent a ‘tsunami of grief’ remains to be seen. The pandemic has highlighted the need for bereavement care to be considered an integral part of health and social care provision.