Abstract:
Suicide is one of the major global public health challenges, with evidence showing 
that an interplay of multiple factors leads to someone taking their life. While suicide is 
often a solitary act, its impact on other people is far-reaching. When someone 
commits suicide, family and friends are almost always left behind to grieve, trying to 
understand the reasons for the suicide and having to learn to continue with their lives. 
Because suicide happens within families, its impact on the remaining members is of 
paramount importance. Understanding the impact of suicide on the surviving family 
members is a critical step in determining how to assist survivors. The study 
comprised eleven (11) participants who were all nuclear family members bereaved 
by suicide in the Capricorn District of Limpopo Province, South Africa. They were all 
from the Sepedi-speaking ethnic group. Data was collected through in-depth, semi structured, individual face-to-face interviews. Data analysis was done through the 
use of Hycner’s phenomenological explication process. The following themes were 
extracted from the participants’ case studies: knowledge of suicide; causes of suicide; 
methods used in the act; the impact of suicide on the family; prevention of suicide; 
coping strategies; grief following suicide and grief following other causes of death; 
concerns about the topic of suicide; and, suggestions in terms of support for suicide 
bereaved families.
The current study reveals that there is still a lot of secrecy around psychological 
problems which lead people to suicide with the survivors not knowing who or what to 
blame. It is also evident from the findings that suicide bereaved people tended to be 
psychologically disturbed, less likeable and more blameworthy than non-suicidally 
bereaved. The psychological impact experienced includes depression, self-blame, 
aggression, suicidal ideations and also resulting in hospitalisation for some. Suicide 
can lead to longer and more complicated grief reactions because family members 
cannot share their experiences or thoughts, particularly the feelings of guilt that they 
are struggling with. The stigma from society does not make it any easier for survivors 
to deal with their grief, leading them to isolate themselves with fear of being judged. 
Based on the study findings, a culturally informed psychological model of suicide 
bereavement was developed to explain the lived experiences of African family v
members bereaved by suicide. The model incorporates some ideas from Bowen’s 
structural family theory and the Afrocentric theory. This model proposes that suicide 
may cause a break-up within the family system and that cultural beliefs may be 
unfavourable in some instances. For instance, in this study, it was found that some 
Africans still believe that suicide is a taboo and a curse, which contradicts the 
psychological importance of viewing the victim’s body by family members. Being 
unable to view the deceased causes complications in the bereavement process, 
which leads to psychological problems. It further proposes that African culture is 
broad and still follows the norms and values in most situations, while these norms 
and values also play a role in the outcome of the bereavement process. These 
norms and values may lead to a breakdown of the family structure, leaving them with 
conflicts or complicated grief, leading to more psychological problems.