Why is it so difficult to provide quality mental health care for multicultural populations? How can quality care be achieved? Understanding Cultural Identity in Intervention and Assessment centers on this dilemma. This text for multicultural courses in counseling, psychotherapy, clinical psychology and social work begins with a description of the existing societal context for mental health services in the United States and the limitations of available services for multicultural populations. It documents the cultural competence a practitioner needs to provide adequate, credible, and potentially beneficial services to diverse clientele. It presents a model for effective culture-specific services that emphasizes the description and understanding of cultural/racial identity and the use of this information to develop cultural formulations to increase the accuracy of diagnoses. To provide examples of this model, the author devotes four chapters to a discussion of mental health services for a variety of domestic groups: African Americans, American Indians/Alaska Natives, Asian Americans, and Hispanic Americans. A valuable supplement to a variety of courses, Understanding Cultural Identity in Intervention and Assessment will enhance students' understanding of multicultural mental health issues in fields such as clinical/counseling psychology, multicultural psychology, educational psychology, social work, health services, and ethnic studies.

Asians and Asian Americans

Asians and Asian Americans

Asians and Asian Americans

Prior to 1980, Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans, respectively, were the largest Asian groups in the United States. By 1990, however, there were almost as many Filipinos as Chinese Americans, and Koreans, Asian Indians, and Vietnamese were almost as numerous as Japanese Americans in the United States. The 1990 census reported 7.3 million Asians/Pacific Islanders from 32 different cultural groups with separate enumerations for 21 groups, including Southeast Asians, Vietnamese, Cambodian, Hmong, Laotian, and Thai (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1990a, 1990b). Other Southeast Asian groups—including Chams and Montagnards from Vietnam; ethnic Chinese from Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia; and Mien from the highlands of Laos—did not have separate census enumeration. More than one million Indochinese are now in ...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles