Black Grief, Black Healing: Exploring African American Parents Grief With Cultural Implications for Treatment
Published online on April 17, 2026
Abstract
["Family Process, Volume 65, Issue 2, June 2026. ", "\nABSTRACT\nAfrican American parents experience child loss at disproportionately high rates, yet family systems and grief literature have largely overlooked this population's grief experience. This paper examines how therapists can provide culturally responsive care to African American parents navigating the death of a child. Drawing on existing literature, this paper expounds on the historical trends within the African American family system while delineating unique African American grief practices. Practical and culturally relevant clinical practices such as facilitating robust social support networks, creating structured opportunities for public and communal mourning, and therapeutically addressing the intensity of grief‐related emotional responses are provided. Family therapists are called to expand their grief frameworks and family interventions beyond individualized, Western‐centric models to encompass the collective, justice‐oriented dimensions of loss that shape the lived experiences of African American families.\n"]