This volume provides a focused review of clinical psychology in communities of color from the twin perspectives of diagnosis/assessment and treatment.
Despite the increasing demand for psychotherapy among communities of color, the field of clinical psychology has not been able to adequately address the need for services and reduce existing mental health disparities in these populations. The book's editors and chapter authors aim to help to eliminate these disparities, offering this book in anticipation that it will become a framework for training clinical psychologists in providing culturally sensitive and evidence-based treatments.
The first objective of the book is to provide a state-of-the-art review of psychopathology, assessment, diagnosis, treatment, and psychotherapy outcomes across African Americans, American Indians and Alaska Natives, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, and Hispanic Americans. The second objective is to use an evidence-based approach to examine the influence of culture in assessment, psychopathology, and treatment. Chapters in Part I address diagnosis and assessment among these populations, while chapters in Part II discuss treatments and interventions. Each part ends with a commentary article by leading scholars in the field.
With the goal of advancing the field of the clinical psychology in communities of color, this volume will be indispensable for a multidisciplinary audience conducting clinical research and providing clinical services.
Series Foreword
Frederick T. L. Leong
Chapter 1. Introduction
Frederick T. L. Leong, Guillermo Bernal, and NiCole T. Buchanan
Part I. Diagnosis and Assessment
Chapter 2. Diagnosis and Assessment With Black Americans: Reducing Bias and Improving Assessment Outcomes
Nicole T. Buchanan and Beverly Greene
Chapter 3. Assessing and Diagnosing Latinos
Alfonso Martínez-Taboas, Margarita Francia, and Viviana Padilla-Martínez
Chapter 4. Clinical Diagnosis and Assessment with Asian Americans: Cultural Validity and Measurement Equivalence
Frederick T. L. Leong and Zornitsa Kalibatseva
Chapter 5. Socio-Historical-Cultural Dimensions for Consideration in the Psychological Assessment of American Indians and Alaska Natives
Jeff King and Joseph E. Trimble
Chapter 6. Race and Ethnic Group Differences in Assessment and Diagnosis: Where to Go With What We Know
Lisa Suzuki, Jen Ying-Zhen Ang, Brittany Matthews, and A. Jordan Wright
Part II. Treatments and Interventions
Chapter 7. CBT for the Treatment of Mental Illness in African/Black Americans: The Current Evidence Base
Alfiee Breland-Noble, Trenita Childers, and Cheryl Anne Boyce
Chapter 8. Psychotherapy for Depression in Adult Latinos: A Systematic Review of the Science
Cristina Adames and Guillermo Bernal
Chapter 9. Culturally Informed Evidence-Based Clinical Strategies and Mental Health Treatments for Asian Americans
Lauren Berger, Cindy Huang, and Nolan Zane
Chapter 10. Mental Health Intervention with American Indian and Alaska Native People
Beth Boyd, Yolanda Flores Niemann, and Cori M. Bazemore-James
Chapter 11. Psychosocial Intervention Research for Communities of Color: Weaving a Tapestry to Advance the Field
Steven R. Lopez and Linda Garro
About the Editors
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