A qualitative study of bereavement support volunteers’ views and experiences on an online Acceptance and commitment therapy-based (ACT) training programme
Authors
Canny, AnneGillanders, David
Burnett, Tamzin
Swash, Brooke
Spiller, Juliet
Harrop, Emily
Selman, Lucy
Reed, Nicola
Finucane, Anne
Affiliation
University of Edinburgh; Marie Curie Hospice, Edinburgh; University of Chester; Cardiff University; University of Bristol; Cruse ScotlandPublication Date
2025-12-08Submitted date
2025-06-03
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Background: Grief is a natural process, and many people will adjust in time with support from family and friends. However, evidence suggests that around 40% of bereaved people may benefit from additional assistance, including support from bereavement volunteers. Despite the recognition that bereavement care is a public health priority, availability of bereavement support is inconsistent across the UK and internationally. The continuing expansion of online connectivity offers opportunities to develop digital health interventions to help address the needs of grieving individuals. To improve access to bereavement support, we developed an online intervention based on Acceptance and Commitment therapy-based Training (ACT) ‘My Grief My Way’ and trained volunteers to provide bereavement support in line with ACT-based principles. Aim: To describe the views and experiences of bereavement support volunteers who undertook online ACT-based bereavement support training designed to help bereaved individuals cope with grief and improve quality of life. Design: Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with a convenience sample of bereavement support volunteers from two not-for-profit bereavement services in UK. Analysis was guided by the framework approach via NVivo-14. Results: A total of 17 participants were recruited; age range 33–76 years, female, n = 15 (88%); ethnicity white, n = 17 (100%). Of these, 15 completed ACT-based My Grief My Way training. Nine participants took part in two focus groups (n = 7) or individual interviews (n = 2), Training was perceived positively, with resulting themes and subthemes indicating there was something to suit everyone’s learning preferences. Participants described the benefits of incorporating ACT-based principles and strategies as valuable additional tools to current practice, underlining the model’s relevance, compatibility and practical application, and was viewed as a good fit irrespective of which therapeutic approach they used with clients. Online ACT-based training and the delivery of ACT-based bereavement support was therefore, perceived as a valuable approach in this context.Citation
Canny, A., Gillanders, D., Burnett, T., Swash, B., Spiller, J., Harrop, E., Selman, L., Reed, N., & Finucane, A. (2025). A qualitative study of bereavement support volunteers’ views and experiences on an online Acceptance and commitment therapy-based (ACT) training programme. PLoS ONE, 20(12), article-number e0337321. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0337321Publisher
Public Library of ScienceJournal
PLoS ONEType
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Copyright: © 2025 Canny et al.EISSN
1932-6203Sponsors
This research was funded by a Research Project Grant from Marie Curie, Ref: MC-21-808. AF is funded by a Marie Curie Research Fellowship.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1371/journal.pone.0337321
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