“A Lot of Ghanaians Really Don’t Understand the Work We Do” – Cultural Adaptations and Barriers in Ghanaian Psychotherapy Practice

Q3 Psychology
V. Dzokoto, A. Anum, A. A. Affram, Joseph K. M. Agbavitoh, H. A. Dadzie, Rebecca Korantemah Mintah, Queen Angela Norman, Cecilia Owusu-Prempeh, Louis N. Tawam, Sarah M. Turkson, Annabella Osei‐Tutu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract. Formal psychotherapy in Ghana is gaining momentum. Concerns about the over-reliance on Western theories bring the suitability of associated clinical interventions into question for Ghanaian, non-Western clients. We interviewed 27 clinical practitioners (including clinical, counseling, and health psychologists) practicing in an urban setting to explore cultural challenges they faced and to identify cultural adaptations they made in their practice. Our participants reported navigating cultural barriers to therapy such as potential clients seeing therapy as an unfamiliar resource, resistance due to mental illness stigma, linguistic barriers, and hierarchical and age norms associated with help-seeking. Our sample identified attention to the following as routine in clinical practice: charismatic Christian and African cosmological worldviews, cultural expectations of helping and interdependence, and family involvement in “individual” therapy sessions. The findings have implications for future psychotherapy practice and training in Ghana and similar Low and Middle Income Country (LMIC) contexts, as well as for clinical work with African immigrants.
“很多加纳人真的不理解我们所做的工作”——加纳心理治疗实践中的文化适应和障碍
摘要在加纳,正式的心理治疗正在获得势头。对过度依赖西方理论的担忧使相关临床干预对加纳非西方客户的适用性受到质疑。我们采访了27名在城市环境中执业的临床从业人员(包括临床、咨询和健康心理学家),以探索他们面临的文化挑战,并确定他们在实践中做出的文化适应。我们的参与者报告了对治疗的文化障碍,如潜在客户将治疗视为一种不熟悉的资源,由于精神疾病耻辱,语言障碍以及与寻求帮助相关的等级和年龄规范而产生的阻力。我们的样本确定了在临床实践中对以下方面的常规关注:魅力基督教和非洲宇宙观,对帮助和相互依赖的文化期望,以及“个人”治疗过程中的家庭参与。这些发现对未来在加纳和类似的中低收入国家(LMIC)的心理治疗实践和培训,以及对非洲移民的临床工作具有启示意义。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: International Perspectives in Psychology: Research, Practice, Consultation® is committed to publishing research that examines human behavior and experiences around the globe from a psychological perspective. It publishes intervention strategies that use psychological science to improve the lives of people around the world. The journal promotes the use of psychological science that is contextually informed, culturally inclusive, and dedicated to serving the public interest. The world''s problems are imbedded in economic, environmental, political, and social contexts. International Perspectives in Psychology incorporates empirical findings from education, medicine, political science, public health, psychology, sociology, gender and ethnic studies, and related disciplines. The journal addresses international and global issues, including: -inter-group relations -disaster response -societal and national development -environmental conservation -emigration and immigration -education -social and workplace environments -policy and decision making -leadership -health carepoverty and economic justice -the experiences and needs of disadvantaged groups
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