Increasing culturally responsive care and mental health equity with Indigenous community mental health workers

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
O'Keefe, Victoria M.
Cwik, Mary F.
Haroz, Emily E.
Barlow, Allison
Publisher
PubMed Central
Date
February 2021
Publication
Psychological Services
Abstract / Description

There are 600 diverse American Indian/Alaska Native communities that represent strong and resilient nations throughout Indian Country. However, a history of genocidal practices, cultural assaults, and continuing oppression contribute to high rates of mental health and substance use disorders. Underresourced mental health care and numerous barriers to services maintain these disparities. Indigenous community mental health workers hold local understandings of history, culture, and traditional views of health and wellness and may reduce barriers to care while promoting tribal health and economic self-determination and sovereignty. The combination of Native community mental health workers alongside a growing workforce of Indigenous mental health professionals may create an ideal system in which tribal communities are empowered to restore balance and overall wellness, aligning with Native worldviews and healing traditions. (author abstract)

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Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Journal Article
Priority Population
Ethnic and racial groups
P4HE Authored
No
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Mental/Behavioral Health