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Using Q Suture to Enhance Resistance to Gap Formation and Tensile Strength of Repaired Flexor Tendons
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Strengthen and Respect Each Thread.

Virginia Araceli Feliz1, Sue D Hobbs1, Rose Borunda1

  • 1College of Education, California State University, Sacramento, CA 95819, USA.

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
|November 11, 2022
PubMed
Summary

Generational trauma significantly impacts the mental health of Black, Indigenous, and Latinx communities due to historical oppression and systemic inequities. Addressing these deep-rooted issues requires culturally sensitive practices in mental healthcare.

Keywords:
communitydiversityinclusionmental healthrepresentation

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Area of Science:

  • Social Psychology
  • Cultural Psychiatry
  • Public Health

Background:

  • Historically marginalized communities, including Black, Indigenous, and Latinx populations, experience unique mental health challenges stemming from generational trauma.
  • Deficit-based perspectives and systemic white supremacy have historically misrepresented and pathologized the cultural practices and identities of People of Color (POC).
  • The mental health industry's organizational culture often presents barriers to care for minoritized communities due to limited practitioner cultural competence and inclusive practices.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To provide mental health practitioners and researchers with a culturally grounded understanding of how generational trauma affects marginalized communities.
  • To highlight the role of white supremacy in perpetuating divisiveness, discontinuity, and othering within mental healthcare.
  • To advocate for the integration of diverse cultural perspectives into mental health practice and research.

Main Methods:

  • Utilizes a culturally grounded epistemology to analyze the impact of generational trauma.
  • Employs Native American storytelling as a method to trace the origins and manifestations of trauma.
  • Examines historical and systemic factors, including Eurocentric impositions and child welfare systems, contributing to trauma.

Main Results:

  • Generational trauma, rooted in historical oppression and cultural erasure, profoundly impacts the well-being of BIPOC communities.
  • Indigenous cultural expressions are frequently misinterpreted as requiring rehabilitation due to a lack of understanding and respect within mainstream systems.
  • Systemic issues within the mental health field limit access and efficacy of care for minoritized groups.

Conclusions:

  • Mental health practice and research must actively dismantle white supremacist structures and incorporate culturally diverse epistemologies.
  • Recognizing and respecting diverse cultural representations of identity, knowledge, and collectivism is crucial for effective mental healthcare.
  • Future research should focus on developing and implementing culturally responsive interventions that address generational trauma in marginalized communities.