It's not specific to parents, but it's specific to grief and this idea of grief literacy.
Scotland is making enormous advances in terms of public education and grief literacy. They have festivals. I'm not sure if it was in Scotland or Great Britain where this whole idea of death cafés began. In Scotland, they're taking that farther and they have week-long festivals. They have dinners called “to absent friends”, which are different from a death café.
I'm not sure if you've heard of death cafés, but they are public events where people come and talk about death, and it's not necessarily specific to their own grief experience. “To absent friends” are organized dinners in small ways where people bring their own personal stories and celebrate their bonds to the specific people who have died.
They've recently introduced legislation about supporting families financially in terms of funeral costs, because funerals are exorbitantly expensive.
I would direct your attention to Scotland and would be happy to help provide some of those resources in a brief to the committee.