Bereavement During COVID-19 in the UK: A Mixed-Methods Study of the Experiences of Bereaved People and Bereavement Services, 2020-2023

Harrop, Emily and Selman, Lucy E (2026). Bereavement During COVID-19 in the UK: A Mixed-Methods Study of the Experiences of Bereaved People and Bereavement Services, 2020-2023. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-858397

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COVID-19 is impacting the grief experiences of people bereaved during the pandemic, whilst also affecting the bereavement services that support them. This study aims to investigate the grief
experiences, support needs and use of bereavement support by people bereaved during the pandemic, and the adaptations, challenges and innovation involved in delivering equitable
bereavement support.

We use qualitative and quantitative methods in three work packages:

(WP1) A UK survey at four time points: baseline, 7, 13 and 25 months post-death. Recruitment via social media, organisations representing minority ethnic groups, and bereavement
organisations. Questions investigate the impact of end-of-life and bereavement experiences during COVID-19 and subsequent access to, needs for and experiences of bereavement support. Validated measures assess grief and coping response, social support, prolonged grief disorder (PGD) and wellbeing.

(WP2) Longitudinal semi-structured telephone interviews (2 time-points) with a sample of respondents exploring experiences of grief and bereavement during COVID-19, including bereavement
support and unmet needs.

(WP3) An online survey of bereavement service providers identifies service adaptations, key challenges and approaches to delivering accessible bereavement care during the pandemic. Survey
findings inform targeted case studies, developed via telephone interviews, to describe innovative practice.

The study identified ‘real-time’ implications for the delivery
of end-of-life care and bereavement support during and beyond the pandemic, to ensure prompt translation into practice.

Data description (abstract)

Work Package One; A UK survey of people bereaved between 16th March 2020 and 2nd January 2021. Four time points: baseline (n=711), c. 7 months (n=384), c. 13 months (n=297), c.25 months (n=185) post-bereavement. At baseline 88.6 % were female, 43.8% were bereaved by Covid-19, 55.6 % had lost parents, followed by partners (21.4%). 4.7% identified with a minority ethnic background. Validated measures assessed grief and coping response (Adult Attitude to Grief scale), social support (Inventory for Social Support), prolonged grief disorder (PGD) (Traumatic Grief Inventory) and wellbeing (ONS wellbeing measure).

Work Package Two; Semi-structured interviews with sub-sample of survey participants, interviewed between May 2021 and February 2022. 24 participants completed a first interview and 15 completed a second interview around 4 months after their first interview. 19 were female, 10 had lost partners, 11 were bereaved by Covid-19, 6 identified with a minority ethnic background.

Work Package Three: Cross-sectional open online survey of UK voluntary sector bereavement services (March-May 2021) (n=147); Qualitative case study interviews with bereavement service providers at a purposive sample of services (14 services, 24 interviews).

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Harrop Emily Cardiff University https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2820-0023
Selman Lucy E University of Bristol https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5747-2699
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council, Marie Curie
Grant reference: ES/V012053/1
Topic classification: Social welfare policy and systems
Health
Society and culture
Psychology
Keywords: BEREAVEMENT, UNITED KINGDOM, COVID-19, ATTITUDES, HUMAN BEHAVIOUR, SOCIAL WELFARE
Project title: Supporting people bereaved during COVID-19: a mixed methods study of bereaved people's experiences and the bereavement services supporting them
Grant holders: Emily Harrop, Lucy Selman, Mirella Longo, Annmarie Nelson, Anthony Byrne, Kathy Seddon
Project dates:
FromTo
13 August 202028 February 2023
Date published: 06 Mar 2026 10:43
Last modified: 06 Mar 2026 10:44

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Publications

Support needs and barriers to accessing support: Baseline results of a mixed-methods national survey of people bereaved during the COVID-19 pandemic
Risk factors associated with poorer experiences of end-of-life care and challenges in early bereavement: Results of a national online survey of people bereaved during the COVID-19 pandemic
'It was brutal. It still is’: a qualitative analysis of the challenges of bereavement during the COVID-19 pandemic reported in two national surveys
Bereavement during the Covid-19 pandemic in the UK: What do we know so far?
Parental perspectives on the grief and support needs of children and young people bereaved during the Covid-19 pandemic: Qualitative findings from a national survey
Factors associated with higher levels of grief and support needs among people bereaved during the pandemic: Results from a national online survey
Sadly I think we are sort of still quite white, middle-class really’ – Inequities in access to bereavement support: Findings from a mixed methods study
Prolonged grief during and beyond the pandemic: factors associated with levels of grief in a four time-point longitudinal survey of people bereaved in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic
“I have never felt so alone and vulnerable” – A qualitative study of bereaved people’s experiences of end-of-life cancer care during the Covid-19 pandemic
“The grief exists in a bubble that the rest of the world doesn't see”: Exploring biographical disruption and meaning-making amongst people bereaved during the Covid-19 pandemic
Shifting to online and telephone bereavement support provision during the COVID-19 pandemic: A mixed methods study of bereavement service provider perspectives and lessons learnt for current practice
Support needs, support use and perceived helpfulness of support in a cohort of people bereaved during the COVID-19 pandemic: Insights from a longitudinal survey

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