This edition is updated to include new research and clinical material for practitioners working with mental health patients of diverse backgrounds. Written by experts in cultural sensitivity, the text begins by establishing innovative approaches to understanding diversity, tools for diversity educational training for health care providers, clinical interviewing techniques and effective strategies in having difficult conversations. Indirect approaches to understanding diversity and mental health come from unique chapters that range from the ways that journalists process and discuss mental health competency to the business model for cultural competency in health care. The second section of the book moves from the broader subjects to the needs of specific populations, including Native Americans, Latinos, Asians, African American, Middle Eastern, Refugee and LGBQT communities. The discussion includes understanding the complexities of making mental health diagnoses and the various meanings these diagnoses have for the socio-cultural group described. Each chapter also details biopsychosocial treatment options and challenges. The Massachusetts General Hospital Textbook on Diversity and Cultural Sensitivity in Mental Health, Second Edition, is an excellent resource for all clinicians working with diverse populations, including psychiatrists, primary care physicians, emergency room physicians, early career physicians and trainees, psychologists, nurses, social workers, researchers, and medical educators. Table of Contents: Part I. Innovative Ways to Understand Diversity Chapter 1. Diversity Dialogue Anne Emmerich, MD, Ariel Otero, MD, Ranna Parekh, MD, and Estee Sharon, PsyD Chapter 2. The Engagement Interview Protocol (EIP): Improving the Acceptance of Mental Health Treatment among Culturally Diverse Populations Nhi-Ha Trinh M.D., M.P.H., Trina Chang M.D., M.P.H., and Albert Yeung M.D., ScD Chapter 3. Cultural and Diversity Issues in Mediation and Negotiation David A. Hoffman, Esq. and Katherine Triantafillou, Esq. Chapter 4. Providing Medical Care to Diverse Populations Deborah Washington, PhD, RNa and Robert Doyle, MA, DDS, MD Chapter 5. Cultivating Courage, Compassion, and Cultural Sensitivity in News Reporting of Mental Health During Challenging Times Linda R. Zucker B.A., M.B.A., J.D. Chapter 6. Illegal, Alien, and Other: Cultural Competency and Migration Schuyler W. Henderson, MD MPH Part II. Specific Populations Chapter 7. Psychiatry for People of African Descent in the USA Carl Bell M.D. and Christine M. Crawford M.D., M.P.H. Chapter 8. American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Joseph E. Trimble Ph.D., Jeff King Ph.D. D, Teresa D. LaFromboise Ph.D., and Dolores Subia BigFoot Ph.D. Chapter 9. Mental Health of Arab Americans: Cultural Considerations for Excellence of Care Imad Melhem M.D.,1 Zeina Chemali M.D., M.P.H., and Ashlee Wolfgang PsyD Chapter 10. An Approach to Mental Health in Asian Americans Shirin Ali, MD Chapter 11. Cultural Sensitivity: What Should We Understand About Latinos? Aida L. Jiménez Ph.D., Margarita Alegría Ph.D., Richard F. Camino-Gaztambide M.D., Lazaro V. Zayas M.D., and Maria Jose Lisotto M.D. Chapter 12. Not by Convention: Working with People on the Sexual and Gender Continuum Jeremy A. Wernick, L.M.S.W., Samantha M. Busa, Psy.D., Aron Janssen M.D., and Karen Ron-Li Liaw M.D. Chapter 13. Understanding the Mental Health of Refugees: Trauma, Stress, and the Cultural Context B. Heidi Ellis Ph.D., Jeffrey P. Winer, Ph.D., Kate Murray Ph.D., M.P.H., and Colleen Barrett M.P.H. |