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Accelerating Community Supports: Advancing Bereavement Policy & Systems, Miami, FL

TBD Miami, TX, United States

Bereavement — the death of someone meaningful in our lives — is increasingly a direct concern for millions of people. Given the concurrency of mortality epidemics – homicide, overdose, suicide, maternal mortality, and traffic fatalities – grief and bereavement are an everyday reality for every neighborhood in America. In addition to the immense personal tragedy people experience, bereavement is a problem with vast health, economic, and social consequences. To address these consequences, Evermore is accelerating lasting societal change using data and science to drive policy and practice advancements that are grounded by the lived experiences of individuals and families. Unbeknownst to most people, bereavement is a significant risk factor for poor health and premature death. It also impacts economic opportunity, redirecting life trajectories downward, and has major spillover effects at every stage of life. Bereavement, for example, is associated with academic failings, substance misuse, teen pregnancy, incarceration, suicide attempts, suicide, and premature death — and a host of other public concerns. Evermore is working with communities across the nation to increase bereavement awareness, education, and community-based policy actions. To create a more livable world for all bereaved people, we are working with:  Child Care Providers Death investigators/Coroners Domestic & Homeless […]

Free

Circles of Remembrance: Listening Sessions with Indian Country

Virtual Event Virtual Event

Kauffman and Associates, Inc. (KAI), Evermore, and the National Center for Fatality Review & Prevention are reimagining how grief and bereavement impact our lives. To learn more from tribal communities, KAI is facilitating 3 virtual listening sessions to gather insights and reflections from Indian Country on traditions, beliefs, and approaches for coping with loss. The information collected during these listening sessions may help inform future resources that support grieving communities. Listening Session Dates Join us for a virtual listening session where we will learn from you about how our ancestors grieved and honored the departed: Listening Session 1: May 12, 2025, 10 am CT Listening Session 2: May 19, 2025, 6 pm CT Listening Session 3: May 27, 2025, 3 pm CT Please note, you may only register and attend 1 listening session. Prize Drawing For each listening session, we will enter participants into a drawing to win 1 of 3 prizes—an Eighth Generation wool blanket, an Eighth Generation cotton blanket, or an Eighth Generation water bottle. About Kauffman and Associates, Inc. KAI is a 100% American Indian– and woman-owned small business specializing in planning, evaluation, communications, training, and facilitation. Meet the Listening Session Facilitators Danica Love Brown, MSW, CACIII, […]

Gone Fishin’ for Good: A Fish Fry with Bo-Hawg, Bluegrass & Bereavement

Moe’s Original BBQ Brainstorming ideas with Greenberry and me: Gone Fishin’ for Good A Fish Fry with Bo-Hawg, Bluegrass & Bereavement Evermore + Bo-Hawg in Daphne, Alabama Saturday, June 21, 2025 Proposed times: 1-3 or 2-4 pm Location: Moe’s Original BBQ, Daphne, AL, United States

From Improbable to Inevitable: What We Can Learn From Tobacco and Obesity Reform to Shape the Future of Funeral Industry Practices

Embassy Suites by Hilton Raleigh Durham Research Triangle 201 Harrison Oaks Boulevard, Cary, NC, United States
Virtual Event Hybrid Event

The Funeral Consumers Alliance (FCA) invites you to join us for our 2025 Biennial Conference: “The Cost of Goodbye: Confronting Funeral Poverty in Our Communities,” a gathering that addresses the urgent challenges of funeral poverty and indigent burial. Taking place from June 26–29, 2025, this event brings together experts, advocates, and community leaders committed to ensuring equitable access to end-of-life care and services. Why This Conversation Matters Funeral poverty and indigent burial continue to be overlooked issues that disproportionately impact marginalized communities. Rising funeral costs, limited access to affordable alternatives, and systemic inequities leave families burdened with overwhelming expenses and difficult choices during times of grief. This year’s theme challenges us to confront these injustices head-on and explore sustainable, community-centered solutions. By participating in this year’s conference, you’ll be part of a dynamic conversation about the future of deathcare—empowering local FCA affiliates to advocate for meaningful change and strengthen their community impact. Through interactive sessions, thought-provoking panels, and guided tours, we will equip attendees with actionable strategies to address these urgent issues in their own communities. Keynote & Featured Speakers We are honored to welcome Pamela Prickett, co-author of The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels, as […]

$250

The Mystery of Grief: Writing into the Loss

Virtual Event Virtual Event

When we lose loved ones, writing can be a powerful tool for helping us remember them, helping us re-encounter the world without them, and helping us re-know ourselves as the loss transforms us. In this two-hour online program, Evermore Poet Laureate Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer will offer a few suggestions for writing. Together, we will read poems about grief and discuss them. We will have chances to do our own writing, there will be optional time for sharing what we wrote, and we will have time to reflect on the effect writing has on us.

$15

Join Evermore’s Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network!

Virtual Event Virtual Event

For too long, bereavement research has failed to give bereaved people a voice and to incorporate the real-world factors that matter to grieving people, especially to their health and well-being. The narrow focus on what’s “wrong” with us and why we haven’t adapted to our loss on a specific timeline simply does not resonate with a large portion of people’s lived experience. Without input from those living with grief, researchers cannot know the most important research questions to ask and what kinds of care models and interventions should be developed. Evermore, with financial support from PCORI, has established the Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network (LEBRN) to do just that.  LEBRN will bring together people with varied backgrounds and expertise, including people who have experienced bereavement themselves — bereaved parents, children, siblings, spouses, and community leaders — alongside bereavement care providers and researchers. Over the next two years, we will identify how to best engage with bereaved people during research endeavors and we will recommend research questions, from the perspective of lived experience, to guide the future of bereavement research. As part of LEBRN, Evermore is engaging all bereaved people who would like to share their experiences, opinions, and insights to inform future bereavement […]

The Mystery of Grief: Writing into the Loss

Virtual Event Virtual Event

When we lose loved ones, writing can be a powerful tool for helping us remember them, helping us re-encounter the world without them, and helping us re-know ourselves as the loss transforms us. In this two-hour online program, Evermore Poet Laureate Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer will offer a few suggestions for writing. Together, we will read poems about grief and discuss them. We will have chances to do our own writing, there will be optional time for sharing what we wrote, and we will have time to reflect on the effect writing has on us.

$15

Join Evermore’s Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network!

Virtual Event Virtual Event

For too long, bereavement research has failed to give bereaved people a voice and to incorporate the real-world factors that matter to grieving people, especially to their health and well-being. The narrow focus on what’s “wrong” with us and why we haven’t adapted to our loss on a specific timeline simply does not resonate with a large portion of people’s lived experience. Without input from those living with grief, researchers cannot know the most important research questions to ask and what kinds of care models and interventions should be developed. Evermore, with financial support from PCORI, has established the Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network (LEBRN) to do just that.  LEBRN will bring together people with varied backgrounds and expertise, including people who have experienced bereavement themselves — bereaved parents, children, siblings, spouses, and community leaders — alongside bereavement care providers and researchers. Over the next two years, we will identify how to best engage with bereaved people during research endeavors and we will recommend research questions, from the perspective of lived experience, to guide the future of bereavement research. As part of LEBRN, Evermore is engaging all bereaved people who would like to share their experiences, opinions, and insights to inform future bereavement […]

Join Evermore’s Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network!

Virtual Event Virtual Event

For too long, bereavement research has failed to give bereaved people a voice and to incorporate the real-world factors that matter to grieving people, especially to their health and well-being. The narrow focus on what’s “wrong” with us and why we haven’t adapted to our loss on a specific timeline simply does not resonate with a large portion of people’s lived experience. Without input from those living with grief, researchers cannot know the most important research questions to ask and what kinds of care models and interventions should be developed. Evermore, with financial support from PCORI, has established the Lived Experience Bereavement Research Network (LEBRN) to do just that.  LEBRN will bring together people with varied backgrounds and expertise, including people who have experienced bereavement themselves — bereaved parents, children, siblings, spouses, and community leaders — alongside bereavement care providers and researchers. Over the next two years, we will identify how to best engage with bereaved people during research endeavors and we will recommend research questions, from the perspective of lived experience, to guide the future of bereavement research. As part of LEBRN, Evermore is engaging all bereaved people who would like to share their experiences, opinions, and insights to inform future bereavement […]