Literature DB >> 22194346

Rethinking cultural competence: insights from indigenous community treatment settings.

Dennis C Wendt1, Joseph P Gone.   

Abstract

Multicultural professional psychologists routinely assert that psychotherapeutic interventions require culturally competent delivery for ethnoracial minority clients to protect the distinctive cultural orientations of these clients. Dominant disciplinary conceptualizations of cultural competence are "kind of person" models that emphasize specialized awareness, knowledge, and skills on the part of the practitioner. Even within psychology, this approach to cultural competence is controversial owing to professional misgivings concerning its culturally essentialist assumptions. Unfortunately, alternative "process-oriented" models of cultural competence emphasize such generic aspects of therapeutic interaction that they remain in danger of losing sight of culture altogether. Thus, for cultural competence to persist as a meaningful construct, an alternative approach that avoids both essentialism and generalism must be recovered. One means to capture this alternative is to shift focus away from culturally competent therapists toward culturally commensurate therapies. Indigenous communities in North America represent interesting sites for exploring this shift, owing to widespread political commitments to Aboriginal cultural reclamation in the context of postcoloniality. Two examples from indigenous communities illustrate a continuum of cultural commensurability that ranges from global psychotherapeutic approaches at one end to local healing traditions at the other. Location of culturally integrative efforts by indigenous communities along this continuum illustrates the possibility for local, agentic, and intentional deconstructions and reconstructions of mental health interventions in a culturally hybrid fashion.

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Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 22194346     DOI: 10.1177/1363461511425622

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  9 in total

Review 1.  Critical cultural awareness: contributions to a globalizing psychology.

Authors:  John Chambers Christopher; Dennis C Wendt; Jeanne Marecek; David M Goodman
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2014-05-19

2.  Incorporating traditional healing into an urban American Indian health organization: a case study of community member perspectives.

Authors:  William E Hartmann; Joseph P Gone
Journal:  J Couns Psychol       Date:  2012-06-25

3.  "All my relations": experiences and perceptions of Indigenous patients connecting with Indigenous Elders in an inner city primary care partnership for mental health and well-being.

Authors:  George Hadjipavlou; Colleen Varcoe; David Tu; Jennifer Dehoney; Roberta Price; Annette J Browne
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2018-05-22       Impact factor: 8.262

4.  A Systematic Review of Trauma Interventions in Native Communities.

Authors:  Julie A Gameon; Monica C Skewes
Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2019-09-13

5.  When solidarity hurts: (Intra)cultural trust, cultural betrayal sexual trauma, and PTSD in culturally diverse minoritized youth transitioning to adulthood.

Authors:  Jennifer M Gómez
Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry       Date:  2021-12-16

6.  Potentially Harmful Therapy and Multicultural Counseling: Bridging Two Disciplinary Discourses.

Authors:  Dennis C Wendt; Joseph P Gone; Donna K Nagata
Journal:  Couns Psychol       Date:  2015-04

7.  Reassessing the Mental Health Treatment Gap: What Happens if We Include the Impact of Traditional Healing on Mental Illness?

Authors:  Tony V Pham; Rishav Koirala; Milton L Wainberg; Brandon A Kohrt
Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  2020-09-07

8.  Where there's a will, there's a way? Strategies to reduce or abstain from alcohol use developed by Northern Plains American Indian women participating in a brief, alcohol-exposed pregnancy preconceptual intervention.

Authors:  Arielle R Deutsch; Rebecca Lustfield; Jessica D Hanson
Journal:  Alcohol Clin Exp Res       Date:  2021-10-05       Impact factor: 3.455

9.  Implicit organizational bias: Mental health treatment culture and norms as barriers to engaging with diversity.

Authors:  Miraj U Desai; Nadika Paranamana; Maria Restrepo-Toro; Maria O'Connell; Larry Davidson; Victoria Stanhope
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2020-03-05
  9 in total

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