Kim Burditt Bartlett, MSW
Kim is the surviving sister of US Marine Corps veteran Jon Hoffman, who died by suicide in April of 2010. Since Jon’s death, Kim’s heart has been drawn to caring for grievers, especially those who are grieving a sibling, and she has been working in the suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention field since 2011.
A born-and-bred New Englander (though she usually tucks in her Boston accent), Kim brings both expertise and heart to her work. She has extensive experience creating trauma-informed content, programming, events, and curricula for suicide loss survivors and those who care for them. She has presented at several conferences in the US and internationally on grief, suicide loss, and post-traumatic growth, always blending deep knowledge with a practical, human-centered approach.
Kim is currently the Senior Manager of Donor Engagement for Black Box Project at Stop Soldier Suicide, where she helps drive forward a groundbreaking initiative using digital data to inform suicide prevention efforts. Previously, she spent over 9 years at the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), where she co-authored the TAPS Suicide Postvention Model and led national grief & suicide loss programs, building innovative, trauma-informed initiatives to support grieving military families.
Outside of her professional work, Kim is an ASIST (Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training) trainer, a facilitator for online suicide loss survivor support groups, and helps lead a grief ministry at her church.
She is also a lover of dogs (especially big ones), a fan of tattoos, and while she doesn’t consider herself an adrenaline junkie, she did jump out of a plane at 14,000 feet … once (and yes, she’d do it again!).
With a mix of compassion, humor, and real-world experience, Kim is committed to ensuring that grieving siblings have the support they need—not just to survive their loss, but to find meaning and growth in its aftermath.