Resource parents during two pandemics: navigating racism and COVID-19

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q3 SOCIAL WORK
Kenyon Lee Whitman, Matthew A. Ruderman, Vanessa Perez, Jill Waterman, Todd Franke, Audra K. Langley
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Qualitatively, resource parents expressed a concern for children and stress, anxiety, and fear.KEYWORDS: COVID-19racial injusticeresource parentschild welfaretransracial families Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1. see Southern Poverty Law Center (2022) https://www.splcenter.org/20220309/year-hate-extremism-report-2021Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the The Pritzker Foster Care Initiative.Notes on contributorsKenyon Lee WhitmanKenyon Lee Whitman, Ph.D. is an assistant professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He has over 10 years of experience working in higher education, much of that time supporting foster youth. Most recently he was a UCLA Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellow, and previously he directed the Office of Foster Youth Support Services at UC Riverside for six years. He received his PhD in Higher Education Administration and Policy at UC Riverside. Kenyon’s research is interdisciplinary, he focuses on underrepresented students in higher education, specifically, the racialized college-going experiences of foster youth. As a former foster youth, he understands first-hand the challenges foster youth face as they work toward earning a college degree. Kenyon also holds a B.S. and M.A. from Fresno State.Matthew A. RudermanMatthew Ruderman, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist who specializes in early childhood mental health, research and evaluation, bullying and victimization, preschool mental health consultation, and trauma-informed care. He received his doctorate in Counseling, Clinical, and School Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Ruderman completed his doctoral internship at St. John's Child and Family Development Center and his postdoctoral fellowship at UCLA TIES for Families. Before rejoining the TIES staff, he served as staff psychologist, supervisor, and trainer at a community mental health clinic. Dr. Ruderman is the recipient of Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars fellowship focusing on addressing health disparities, health inequities, and building a culture of health.Vanessa PerezVanessa Perez graduated from UCLA in 2020 with a major in Psychology and a minor in Applied Developmental Psychology. While at UCLA, she worked as a research assistant in the CHILD FIRST lab, headed by Dr. Bruce Chorpita. As a research assistant, she examined different interventions aimed at increasing client engagement in mental health services and aided in exploring service equity in the Latinx community. Vanessa also conducted an independent research project examining whether the addressability of life stressors in therapy sessions differed depending on what type of treatment protocol a client was assigned to and if the addressability of the life stressor predicted the provider’s use of structured activities in the session in which the life stressor was disclosed. Vanessa plans to apply to graduate programs in Clinical Psychology in 2022. She is particularly interested in exploring the effectiveness and accessibility of evidence-based treatments in community-based clinics to help serve culturally and socioeconomically diverse youth affected by trauma.Jill WatermanJill Waterman, Ph.D. was one of the initial developers of TIES for Adoption in 1995 (now UCLA TIES for Families) and currently is the Associate Director of Infant Mental Health, as well as a supervisor of psychology externs and postdoctoral fellows. She is Adjunct Professor Emerita in the UCLA Psychology Department and former Coordinator of the UCLA Psychology Clinic, the training clinic for UCLA’s top-ranked Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program. Dr. Waterman’s research involves long-term follow-up of children adopted from foster care and their families (many now adolescents and young adults), as well as evaluation, treatment and follow-up of prenatally exposed infants placed with foster parents who hope to adopt them, and evaluation of Adoption-specific Therapy. Dr. Waterman is author of 3 books on aspects of child trauma and numerous articles, and is the lead author of Adoption-Specific Therapy: A Guide to Helping Adopted Children and their Families Thrive, published by American Psychological Association Books in 2018. In addition, she is a practicing clinician specializing in treatment with parents and young children.Todd FrankeTodd Franke, Ph.D. seeks to achieve a better understanding of, and improve the responsiveness of service systems in the fields of social services, education and health. Dr. Franke’s research has focused in part on the impact of disability and chronic illness on school-age children. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe emergence of COVID-19 created a global health crisis and impacted children and families, disproportionately affecting minoritized communities. Simultaneously, protests and anti-racist uprisings against police violence occurred worldwide. This mixed method study examined how a group of racially diverse resource parents navigated these two pandemics. Resource parents (N = 527) in Los Angeles County were surveyed about concerns related to COVID-19, racial injustice, and the sociopolitical climate. Quantitative findings revealed that increased difficulty coping with COVID-19 was associated with the increased reported impact of events surrounding racial injustice. Qualitatively, resource parents expressed a concern for children and stress, anxiety, and fear.KEYWORDS: COVID-19racial injusticeresource parentschild welfaretransracial families Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.Notes1. see Southern Poverty Law Center (2022) https://www.splcenter.org/20220309/year-hate-extremism-report-2021Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the The Pritzker Foster Care Initiative.Notes on contributorsKenyon Lee WhitmanKenyon Lee Whitman, Ph.D. is an assistant professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. He has over 10 years of experience working in higher education, much of that time supporting foster youth. Most recently he was a UCLA Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellow, and previously he directed the Office of Foster Youth Support Services at UC Riverside for six years. He received his PhD in Higher Education Administration and Policy at UC Riverside. Kenyon’s research is interdisciplinary, he focuses on underrepresented students in higher education, specifically, the racialized college-going experiences of foster youth. As a former foster youth, he understands first-hand the challenges foster youth face as they work toward earning a college degree. Kenyon also holds a B.S. and M.A. from Fresno State.Matthew A. RudermanMatthew Ruderman, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist who specializes in early childhood mental health, research and evaluation, bullying and victimization, preschool mental health consultation, and trauma-informed care. He received his doctorate in Counseling, Clinical, and School Psychology from the University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Ruderman completed his doctoral internship at St. John's Child and Family Development Center and his postdoctoral fellowship at UCLA TIES for Families. Before rejoining the TIES staff, he served as staff psychologist, supervisor, and trainer at a community mental health clinic. Dr. Ruderman is the recipient of Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars fellowship focusing on addressing health disparities, health inequities, and building a culture of health.Vanessa PerezVanessa Perez graduated from UCLA in 2020 with a major in Psychology and a minor in Applied Developmental Psychology. While at UCLA, she worked as a research assistant in the CHILD FIRST lab, headed by Dr. Bruce Chorpita. As a research assistant, she examined different interventions aimed at increasing client engagement in mental health services and aided in exploring service equity in the Latinx community. Vanessa also conducted an independent research project examining whether the addressability of life stressors in therapy sessions differed depending on what type of treatment protocol a client was assigned to and if the addressability of the life stressor predicted the provider’s use of structured activities in the session in which the life stressor was disclosed. Vanessa plans to apply to graduate programs in Clinical Psychology in 2022. She is particularly interested in exploring the effectiveness and accessibility of evidence-based treatments in community-based clinics to help serve culturally and socioeconomically diverse youth affected by trauma.Jill WatermanJill Waterman, Ph.D. was one of the initial developers of TIES for Adoption in 1995 (now UCLA TIES for Families) and currently is the Associate Director of Infant Mental Health, as well as a supervisor of psychology externs and postdoctoral fellows. She is Adjunct Professor Emerita in the UCLA Psychology Department and former Coordinator of the UCLA Psychology Clinic, the training clinic for UCLA’s top-ranked Clinical Psychology Ph.D. program. Dr. Waterman’s research involves long-term follow-up of children adopted from foster care and their families (many now adolescents and young adults), as well as evaluation, treatment and follow-up of prenatally exposed infants placed with foster parents who hope to adopt them, and evaluation of Adoption-specific Therapy. Dr. Waterman is author of 3 books on aspects of child trauma and numerous articles, and is the lead author of Adoption-Specific Therapy: A Guide to Helping Adopted Children and their Families Thrive, published by American Psychological Association Books in 2018. In addition, she is a practicing clinician specializing in treatment with parents and young children.Todd FrankeTodd Franke, Ph.D. seeks to achieve a better understanding of, and improve the responsiveness of service systems in the fields of social services, education and health. Dr. Franke’s research has focused in part on the impact of disability and chronic illness on school-age children. He is currently conducting a study, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, on the use of personal assistance services for children with disabilities. In addition, Dr. Franke studies how adolescents solve social problems; urban mobility and its impact on children’s education and social development; and how to successfully integrate health and social services in school settings. Dr. Franke is active in several local and regional efforts to restructure social services in the schools, helping to conceptualize planning and implementation and the design of evaluation measures in Los Angeles Unified School District, the country’s second-largest school district. His primary work occurs at the intersection of youth violence (child welfare and gang involved youth) and education. Additionally, he has numerous years of experience in conducting cross-sectional and longitudinal research in the fields of education, child welfare and adolescent violence.Audra K. LangleyAudra Langley, Ph.D. is the Director of UCLA TIES for Families. Dr. Langley is a Clinical Psychologist and Professor of Health Sciences at the UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and the UCLA DGSOM Department of Pediatrics. Dr. Langley also co-directs the UCLA Pritzker Center for Strengthening Children and Families and is the Child Welfare lead for the DMH UCLA Prevention Center of Excellence. Dr. Langley is an experienced clinician and researcher who specializes in culturally responsive, trauma and resiliency informed care for children and adolescents with post-traumatic stress and her body of work has sought to increase access to quality mental health interventions for under-resourced populations of children, including those involved in the child welfare system and school based mental health. Dr. Langley is the author of 4 treatment manuals and books, including “ADAPT Adoption-specific Psychotherapy: A Guide to helping Adopted Children and Their Families Thrive” and “Bounce Back: an Elementary School Intervention for Childhood Trauma.” She has presented and published numerous research papers and trainings on her work.
两大流行病期间的资源父母:驾驭种族主义和COVID-19
摘要COVID-19的出现造成了全球健康危机,影响了儿童和家庭,对少数族裔社区的影响尤为严重。与此同时,世界各地发生了反对警察暴力的抗议和反种族主义起义。这项混合方法研究考察了一组不同种族的父母如何应对这两种流行病。对洛杉矶县的资源父母(N = 527)进行了有关COVID-19、种族不公正和社会政治气候的调查。定量调查结果显示,应对COVID-19的难度增加与报道的种族不公正事件的影响增加有关。从质量上讲,资源型父母表达了对孩子的关注、压力、焦虑和恐惧。关键词:covid -19种族不公正资源父母子女福利跨种族家庭披露声明作者未报告潜在利益冲突。见南方贫困法律中心(2022)https://www.splcenter.org/20220309/year-hate-extremism-report-2021Additional信息经费本工作得到普利兹克寄养倡议的支持。作者简介:凯尼恩·李·惠特曼凯尼恩·李·惠特曼博士,拉斯维加斯内华达大学助理教授。他在高等教育领域有超过10年的工作经验,大部分时间都在支持寄养青年。最近,他是加州大学洛杉矶分校校长的博士后研究员,在此之前,他曾在加州大学河滨分校领导了六年的寄养青年支持服务办公室。他在加州大学河滨分校获得高等教育管理和政策博士学位。凯尼恩的研究是跨学科的,他专注于高等教育中代表性不足的学生,特别是寄养青年的种族化大学经历。作为一名前寄养青年,他对寄养青年在努力获得大学学位时所面临的挑战有第一手的了解。凯尼恩还拥有弗雷斯诺州立大学的学士学位和硕士学位。Matthew a . Ruderman博士是一名临床心理学家,专门研究儿童早期心理健康、研究和评估、欺凌和受害、学前心理健康咨询和创伤知情护理。他在加州大学圣巴巴拉分校获得咨询、临床和学校心理学博士学位。Ruderman博士在圣约翰儿童和家庭发展中心完成了博士实习,并在加州大学洛杉矶分校家庭关系学院完成了博士后研究。在重新加入TIES工作人员之前,他曾在一家社区精神卫生诊所担任工作心理学家、主管和培训师。Ruderman博士是Robert Wood Johnson临床学者奖学金的获得者,专注于解决健康差异、健康不平等和建立健康文化。Vanessa Perez于2020年毕业于加州大学洛杉矶分校,主修心理学,辅修应用发展心理学。在加州大学洛杉矶分校期间,她在布鲁斯·乔皮塔博士领导的儿童第一实验室担任研究助理。作为一名研究助理,她研究了旨在提高客户参与精神卫生服务的不同干预措施,并协助探索拉丁裔社区的服务公平性。瓦妮莎还进行了一个独立的研究项目,检查治疗过程中生活压力源的可寻址性是否因客户被分配到何种治疗方案而有所不同,以及生活压力源的可寻址性是否预示着提供者在披露生活压力源的治疗过程中使用的结构化活动。凡妮莎计划在2022年申请临床心理学的研究生课程。她特别感兴趣的是探索以社区为基础的诊所的循证治疗的有效性和可及性,以帮助服务受创伤影响的文化和社会经济不同的青年。吉尔·沃特曼博士是1995年收养关系(现为加州大学洛杉矶分校家庭关系)的最初开发者之一,目前是婴儿心理健康副主任,以及心理学实习生和博士后研究员的导师。她是加州大学洛杉矶分校心理学系的兼职名誉教授,也是加州大学洛杉矶分校心理诊所的前任协调员,该诊所是加州大学洛杉矶分校排名第一的临床心理学博士课程的培训诊所。沃特曼博士的研究包括对从寄养家庭收养的儿童及其家庭(许多现在是青少年和年轻人)的长期随访,以及对与希望收养他们的寄养父母一起安置的产前暴露婴儿的评估、治疗和随访,以及对收养特异性治疗的评估。沃特曼博士是3本关于儿童创伤方面的书籍和许多文章的作者,也是《收养特定治疗:帮助收养儿童及其家庭茁壮成长指南》的主要作者,该指南于2018年由美国心理协会图书出版。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
12.50%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: Decisions made in the practice of child welfare have lifelong effects on children and their entire families which in turn affects every facet of society. To effectively practice in this vital field, social workers, psychologists, counselors, juvenile court judges, attorneys, and other child welfare professionals need to stay informed about the latest findings and important issues in public child welfare. To answer this crucial need, the Journal of Public Child Welfare provides a broad forum for theory-based and applied research in child welfare. Rather than limit itself to primarily private agencies, this essential journal provides the quality research and comprehensive information that child welfare professionals and public agencies need most.
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