Cultural Humility Training in Mental Health Service Provision: A Scoping Review of the Foundational and Conceptual Literature

  • 0Social Work, Victoria University, Melbourne 3011, Australia.
Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) +

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Ongoing access and equity concerns for culturally diverse populations in mental health warrant a shift from cultural competence to cultural humility training. This review aimed to systematically assess the breadth of conceptual and training literature in peer-reviewed publications drawn from PsycINFO, CINAHL plus, Google Scholar and Scopus, from 2007-2018, utilizing cultural humility as the key search term and its relevance to service provision.

METHODS

This method utilized a five-stage scoping review framework.

RESULTS

Results were that a total of 246 publications were extracted. Following employing an abstract review method and removing duplicates, this resulted in a full-text review of 56 publications. The emerging themes included the following: culturally informed conceptual frameworks; culturally diverse training approaches; racial inequalities in mental health services; culturally informed national and international perspectives; race and international transcultural mental health.

CONCLUSIONS

Conclusions were that including cultural humility principles in service provision and training enables greater self-awareness towards racial bias and negative cultural stereotypes at both practice and organizational levels, ultimately aimed at enhancing mental health service provision by mitigating the structural barriers encountered by service users.

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