Addressing Traumatizing Environments: A Case Study of the Showing up for Black Power, Liberation, and Healing Initiative
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Published:2023-08
Issue:3S
Volume:34
Page:137-161
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ISSN:1548-6869
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Container-title:Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved
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language:en
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Short-container-title:hpu
Author:
Stanley Marcus A.,Stanton Megan C.,Traylor Masonia,Ali Samira B.
Abstract
Abstract: Effectively combating HIV will require southern HIV Service Organizations (SHSOs) to support Black staff while they navigate traumas related to structural racism driving the epidemic. HIV organizational capacity-building research lacks effective community-led approaches to anti-racist organizational change centered on Black people's experiences. This participatory case study examines "Showing Up for Black Power, Liberation and Healing," an organizational capacity-building initiative that leads to individual and organizational change, developed and implemented by the SUSTAIN, an intermediary purveyor organization (IPO). Evaluation data include participant observation notes and in-depth, open-ended evaluation reports analyzed using interpretive phenomenological analysis. The intervention consisted of a two-part shared learning collaborative. Qualitative impact themes highlighted: 1) the power of defining and valuing Black-centered spaces to address trauma; 2) reframing self-care from an individualistic responsibility to an institutionally supported, communal means of healing; and 3) the role of the intervention in spurring organizational changes related to dismantling White supremacy work culture in SHSOs.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health