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Latino
Mental Health Services Continued...
Results reveal
a dramatic increase in mental disorders the longer Mexican Americans
live in California. That is, for nearly all of the major mental
disorders assessed, there was a positive association between acculturation
and risk for lifetime prevalence of diagnosable mental disorders
(e.g., any affective, anxiety, or substance use disorder). For
example, nearly 50% of U.S. born Mexican Americans met criteria
for a diagnosable mental disorder,
compared to 32.3% among long-term immigrants, and just 18.4% among
short-term immigrants. These findings lead to the conclusion that
acculturation has deleterious effects on Mexicans who migrate
to the U.S.
Culturally
competent mental health services are needed to address the declining
mental health of Latinos in the U.S. Because Latinos underutilize
mental health service while overutilizing health and religious
services for emotional and interpersonal problems, outreach to
where Latinos live, work, and seek help is essential. Hospitals,
churches, and natural support systems within the Latino community
are logical places in which to make Latinos aware of needed mental
health services. Services need to be easy to access (both physically
and financially) and must be culturally and socially acceptable.
For example,
the central role of the family in most Latino lives makes family
therapy a viable way of addressing a variety of problems, especially
conflicts between couples or between parents and children. Short-term,
problem-focused therapies also represent
practical ways of responding to the pressing, low-income circumstances
of many Latino clients, as well as to their expectations of an
active, educating, and prescriptive therapist. Given the Western
European and mainstream American values embedded in most forms
of contemporary psychotherapy, intervention approaches often need
to be modified to fit the Latino experience. At the same time,
it is necessary to work outside Latino culture by teaching clients
new cultural skills that help them to function more fully in their
essentially bicultural reality.
Excerpted
from Kurt C. Organista, Peter G. Manoleas, and Rafael Herrera
(2001), "Culturally Competent Mental Health Services for Latinos:
An Examination of Three Practice Settings," in Shardlow, S. &
Doel, M. (eds.), Learning to Practice Social Work: International
Approaches, Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
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