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A systematic review of mental health care workers' constructions about culturally and linguistically diverse people.

Tinashe Moira DunePeter CaputiBeverly Walker
Published in: PloS one (2018)
A systematic review of research published in English was conducted across seven electronic databases in psychology, health and social sciences. The aim was to ascertain the nature of mental health care workers' constructions about culturally and linguistically diverse individuals in order to facilitate provision of culturally appropriate service delivery and multicultural training. The constructs and perspectives of 5,870 mental health workers with regards to minority populations are represented across the 38 studies included. Key themes comprised: Aetiology of Constructions; Content of Constructions, Factors that Influence Constructions; Implications for Cultural Competence, Implications for the Therapeutic Alliance, Recommendations for Training, Recommendations for Practice and Recommendations for Research. The therapeutic alliance was most at risk when practitioners displayed low levels of cultural competency and high levels of racial and ethnic blindness. The changing and increasingly multicultural context within most countries means that mental health systems and workers need to prepare for an increasing range of culturally and linguistically diverse clients in need of support. Recommendations are explored for training, practice and research.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • clinical practice
  • mental illness
  • virtual reality
  • systematic review
  • general practice
  • machine learning
  • health information
  • hepatitis c virus
  • genetic diversity