Abstract
Adults bereaved by the suicide or overdose death of someone close to them are vulnerable to adverse mental health outcomes, but little is known about how these individuals utilize avoidance- and approach-based coping strategies, how these strategies relate to outcomes, and what accounts for these associations. Informed by contemporary theories of bereavement, we utilize prospective data from suicide- and overdose-bereaved adults (N = 212) who completed two waves of online data collection approximately two years following the death (T1 and T2; six months apart) to examine the mediating role of meaning making in the relationship between coping strategies and grief-related mental health outcomes, such as prolonged grief (PG), posttraumatic stress (PTS), and depression. Path analysis with mediation was used to investigate the relations between coping strategies at T1, meaning making at T2, and mental health outcomes at T2. The results indicated direct effects of avoidant coping at T1 in predicting higher PG and PTS symptoms at T2, while approach-based coping at T1 indirectly predicted an improvement in all three T2 outcomes due to increased meaning making. These results suggest that avoidance-based strategies directly and indirectly contribute to poorer outcomes and impaired meaning making processes, while approach-based strategies lead to increased meaning making and adaptation to loss among suicide and overdose loss survivors. The clinical implications and future directions for research are discussed.