精神病学中的微侵犯与文化断裂:将多元文化咨询导向扩展到精神病学服务。

Focus (American Psychiatric Publishing) Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-15 DOI:10.1176/appi.focus.20240034
Brendalisse Rudecindo, Patty Kuo, William A Smith, Karen W Tao, Zachary E Imel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

种族微侵犯和文化破裂对黑人、土著和有色人种(BIPOC)社区的精神卫生保健产生了重大影响。本文回顾了多元文化咨询取向框架在精神病学中的应用,以应对这些挑战并改善治疗结果。作者概述了将文化谦逊融入精神病学实践的策略,强调自我反思、反馈和对微侵犯的识别。通过培养谦逊的文化,提供者可以创造治疗空间,让患者感到安全和认可。文章还讨论了探索患者身份的文化机会,并倡导在治疗早期就这些方面进行公开对话。结构性建议包括加强培训计划,纳入以公平为重点的课程,促进BIPOC临床医生的招聘和保留,以及制定制度政策以解决系统性不平等问题。采用这些方法可以减少微侵犯的不良影响,建立信任,并改善BIPOC患者的心理健康结果。作者建议,未来的努力应强调培训、招聘和社区参与方面的系统性变革,以创建一个更具包容性的精神卫生保健系统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Microaggressions and Cultural Ruptures in Psychiatry: Extending Multicultural Counseling Orientation to Psychiatric Services.

Racial microaggressions and cultural ruptures have a significant impact on mental health care for Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) communities. This article reviews the application of the multicultural counseling orientation framework in psychiatry to address these challenges and improve therapeutic outcomes. The authors outline strategies to integrate cultural humility into psychiatric practice, with an emphasis on self-reflection, feedback, and the recognition of microaggressions. By fostering cultural humility, providers can create therapeutic spaces where patients feel safe and validated. The article also discusses cultural opportunities for exploring patients' identities and advocates for open dialogue that addresses these aspects early in treatment. Structural recommendations include enhancing training programs to incorporate equity-focused coursework, promoting recruitment and retention of BIPOC clinicians, and developing institutional policies to address systemic inequities. Adopting these approaches can reduce the adverse effects of microaggressions, build trust, and improve mental health outcomes for BIPOC patients. The authors suggest that future efforts should emphasize systemic changes in training, recruitment, and community engagement to create a more inclusive mental health care system.

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