导航身份和恢复力:支持患有多发性硬化症的黑人妇女

IF 1 4区 心理学 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED
Jessica S. Henry, Janice A. Byrd-Badjie, Aiesha T. Lee, Mona Robinson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

患有多发性硬化症的黑人女性形成并保持了对力量、自力更生和照顾他人的文化期望,这就是所谓的女超人图式(SWS),同时也驾驭着她们的残疾身份。SWS框架指导了本研究,突出了导致黑人妇女寻求帮助行为的独特因素。以下三个问题指导了这项调查:黑人妇女与社会主义社会有联系吗?黑人女性多发性硬化症患者的生活经历的本质是什么?有多发性硬化症经历的黑人女性在维持SWS的角色义务和发展残疾身份方面面临什么挑战?这些发现的含义表明,通常以负面心理影响为特征的SWS,可以作为面对改变生活的残疾的黑人妇女赋权的来源。通过本文,我们提倡进一步的研究和出版,以强调黑人多发性硬化症妇女心理健康的重要性,为心理健康专业人员提供资源,并为咨询师和咨询教育者提供策略,以支持黑人多发性硬化症妇女在SWS的文化需求中导航。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Navigating Identity and Resilience: Supporting Black Women With Multiple Sclerosis

Navigating Identity and Resilience: Supporting Black Women With Multiple Sclerosis

Black women with multiple sclerosis developed and maintained cultural expectations of strength, self-reliance, and caregiving known as superwoman schema (SWS) while also navigating their disability identity. The SWS framework guided this study and highlighted unique factors that contributed to the help-seeking behaviors of Black women. The following three questions directed this investigation: Do Black women associate with the SWS?; What is the essence of the lived experience for Black women with MS?; and What challenges do Black women with MS experience regarding maintaining role obligations of SWS and the development of a disability identity? Implications of these findings suggest that SWS, typically characterized as having negative psychological ramifications, can serve as a source of empowerment with Black women facing a life-changing disability. Through this manuscript, we advocate for further research and publications that highlight the importance of mental health of Black women with MS, provide resources for mental health professionals, and offer strategies for counselors and counselor educators to support Black women with MS in navigating the cultural demands of SWS.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
20.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: The Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development is a quarterly journal of the Association for Multicultural Counseling and Development (AMCD), a member association of the American Counseling Association. AMCD members receive the journal as a benefit of membership. The journal is concerned with research, theory and program applications pertinent to multicultural and ethnic minority interests in all areas of counseling and human development.
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