NEW
YORK, Dec. 14, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- A series of
literature reviews publishing online December 13 in The Lancet
Psychiatry journal highlight the large body of evidence on the
role played by racism in mental health disparities experienced
by Black people living in the United States.
Along with an essay from Black Americans that describes their
lived experiences, the three new papers in the series include
analysis of more than 50 years of literature on the effects of
racism. The authors conclude that improving the mental well-being
of Black Americans requires a community-centered and culturally
informed approach that is inclusive, accessible and promotes
empowerment and resilience in Black communities. The papers also
highlight the urgent need for Black sociologists, anthropologists,
scientists, physicians, clinicians, and citizens to be setting the
priorities in mental health care based on lived experiences.
Led by a physician scientist at NYU Grossman School of Medicine,
the authors call for a comprehensive analysis of the conditions and
systems through which racism produces mental health issues, while
highlighting the potential of community-driven action to reduce
inequity.
"Our reviews highlight the impact of racism on mental health
disparities, and emphasize the need to understand the roots of
racial inequity to achieve racial justice in health care," said
series lead author Ayana Jordan, MD,
PhD, the Barbara Wilson Associate Professor in the Department of
Psychiatry, and co-lead for the community engagement pillar of the
Institute for Excellence in Health Equity at NYU Langone
Health.
Racism Shapes Black Mental Health
Due to centuries of racism, Black Americans have much greater
exposure to risk factors for mental illness, says Dr. Jordan,
including lower quality education, impoverished neighborhoods, high
rates of homelessness, and exposure to violence with high rates of
police brutality. Additionally, the mental health care system as it
stands invalidates the experience of Black Americans, dismissing
their cultural backgrounds.
Due to inequitable systems that are not culturally informed,
Black people are less likely to seek mental health care when
compared to White Americans. Further, Black people have
historically been excluded from medical research, and Black
scientists make up less than 1 % of researchers receiving
independent research funding from the US National Institutes of
Health.
Centuries of dehumanization have led to underestimation,
misdiagnosis, and inadequate treatment of mental illness among
Black Americans, says Jordan, who is also an associate professor in
the NYU Langone Department of Population Health. The authors argue
that the definitions and framing of mental health, mental illness,
and the prescriptions for diagnosing, treating, and maintaining
wellness have all been grounded in whiteness and myths of white
supremacy. They point out that explanations for the differences in
rates of mental illness and substance use disorders between racial
and ethnic groups have often been incorrectly seen as evidence of
biological or cultural distinctions, and are missing explanations
of systemic, avoidable, and unjust policies.
To address these challenges, Jordan and colleagues are calling
for a comprehensive analysis of the conditions and systems that
produce mental illness and compromise mental health. They say this
work must go beyond traditional views of individualized mental
illness classifications to focus on collective efforts to combat
racism and establish equitable systems that promote Black mental
health.
Further, the new articles highlight the value of community-based
participatory research (CBPR) conducted by Black scientists, Black
leaders, and community members to improve the mental well-being of
Black Americans. CBPR involves active participation and input from
community members throughout the research process, giving
communities a voice as they work with researchers toward
long-lasting and culturally appropriate solutions.
In addition, the work looks at the effect of racism on
epidemiology, the scientific discipline that estimates the burden
of mental illness in populations. Effective sampling and minimizing
bias are essential, particularly when the estimates are being used
to determine policy. Thus, the methods of collecting, using, and
analyzing epidemiological data are critical to the ways in which
the intersection of race and mental illness is understood.
The researchers point out that explanations for the differences
in rates of mental illness and substance use disorders between
racial and ethnic groups are missing explanations of the systemic
unjust policies underlying the inequities. For example, the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5),
which has long been the classification system to understand mental
illness, does not fully capture the experience of being racialized
as Black, Jordan notes. Instead of understanding the effects of
racism, the DSM-5 locates the problems of mental illness in the
bodies and behaviors of individuals and categorizes differences by
race—perpetuating systemic biases.
The series authors are calling for a large-scale study that
identifies publicly available datasets on political districting,
economic factors, environmental exposures to racism, and
individual-level data related to emotional wellbeing, standardizes
them for analysis, and analyzes the data for impact on emotional
wellbeing. This could serve as the basis for a risk index that
quantifies different exposures to racism and their potential impact
on emotional wellbeing.
This integrated analysis can inform policies by capturing the
dramatic impact of inequities on Black mental health in terms of
civilian deaths from police, the percentage of those where
substance use and mental illness were involved in deaths, the lack
of access to treatment, the likelihood of incarceration, and the
way Black people are portrayed in the media.
Articles for this review were identified through searches of
PubMed and Google Scholar for work published from January, 1969 to
October, 2023, by use of the terms "racism", "racial inequalities",
"mental health", "Black people", "minority", and "public
policy".
Along with Dr. Jordan, authors of review series were
Mindy Fullilove, MD, of The New School; Ebony
Dix, MD, of Yale University School of
Medicine; Sidney Hankerson,
MD, of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; Jonathan
Lassiter, PhD, of Cooper Medical School at Rowan University, Alfiee
Breland-Noble, PhD, of the African American Knowledge
Optimized for Mindfully-Health Adolescents (AAKOMA) Project,
Frederick Streets, DSW, of Yale Divinity
School; and Chyrell Bellamy,
PhD, Richard Youins, and
Kimberly Guy of the Program for
Recovery and Community Health at Yale
University School of Medicine.
The series was funded by NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry, the Yale Department of Psychiatry, and
the Yale School of Medicine, as well as
by grant 5H79TI081358-04 from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA) in the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, grant 5R01AA028778-04 from the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), and grant
1R01DA057651-01 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).
NIAAA and NIDA are part of the National Institutes of Health.
Contact: Gregory Williams,
gregory.williams@nyulangone.org
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SOURCE NYU Langone Health System