Policy for Equity: Associations Between Community Mental Health Agency Policies and Clinicians’ Cultural Competence

Author:

Triplett Noah S.1ORCID,Blanks Jones Jasmin L.2ORCID,Garfias Yasmin1ORCID,Williams Natasha D.3,Dorsey Shannon1

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA

2. Center for Social Concern, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA

3. University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA

Abstract

Systemic reform is needed to address racism as a root cause of mental health inequities, such as understanding how community mental health (CMH) agencies’ practices and policies may impact care provided to racially minoritized populations. This study described and examined associations between CMH clinicians’ multicultural knowledge and awareness and agency practices and policies to improve care for Clients of Color. CMH clinicians (N = 119) across Washington State reported on their multicultural competence and agencies’ practices and policies in an online survey. Multicultural competence was assessed with the Multicultural Counseling Knowledge and Awareness Scale (MCKAS), which assesses respondents’ knowledge of multicultural counseling frameworks and awareness of multicultural counseling issues. Agency policies were examined with an adapted version of the Multiculturally Competent Service System (MCSS) Assessment Guide, which asked respondents to endorse the degree to which their agencies had taken specific steps to better serve racially and ethnically minoritized populations across 11 domains, including policies, linguistic diversity in services, and quality monitoring and improvement. Multicultural knowledge and awareness were generally high across the sample. Clinicians commonly endorsed that their agencies had mission statements that were committed to cultural competence. Endorsement of concrete steps to improve services for non-English speaking clients was associated with greater multicultural knowledge and awareness, and practices to monitor and improve care provided to Clients of Color were associated with lower scores. Addressing mental health inequities requires multifaceted solutions. Results highlight the potential of examining agency practices and policies as one solution to improve care for Clients of Color.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nursing (miscellaneous),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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