Culturally adapting psychotherapy for Asian heritage populations : an evidence-based approach /
Culturally Adapting Psychotherapy for Asian Heritage Populations: An Evidence-Based Approach provides insights on how research on psychotherapy, an area that is most often done on non-ethnic minority populations, can be related to minority clients. The book's author, Dr. Hwang, developed the fi...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, MA :
Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier,
�2016.
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Colección: | Practical resources for the mental health professional.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover; Culturally Adapting Psychotherapy for Asian Heritage Populations; Copyright Page; Contents; Preface; Clinical Trial Sites; Focus Group Contributions; Research Staff; References; I. Understanding the science of culturally adapting psychotherapy; 1 Why Is It Important to Culturally Adapt Therapy for Asian Heritage Populations?; Why Write This Book for Asian Heritage Populations?; Who Do We Mean by Asian Heritage Populations?; Understanding Asian Heritage Populations in the United States; Mind-Body Divergence Between the East and the West; The Development of Western Psychotherapy.
- What Are Our Options for Providing Culturally Competent and Effective Care?References; 2 What Do We Mean by Culturally Adapting Psychotherapy?; Institutional Support for Cultural Competency; Cultural Competency Defined; How Is Culturally Adapting Therapy Different From Cultural Competency?; A Reformulated Culturally Adapted Treatment Definition; Frameworks for Culturally Adapting Therapy; Examples of Culturally Adapted Interventions; Overall, What Do We Know About Culturally Adapted Treatments and Outcomes?; Why Is Culturally Adapting Treatment Important?; References.
- 3 Understanding Cultural Influences on Mental HealthUnderstanding Culture-Universal and Culture-Specific Phenomena; The Cultural Influences on Mental Health (CIMH) Model; Cultural Issues in the Etiology and Causes of Illness; Acculturation and Adaptation Stressors; Family Relationships; Racism and Discrimination; Socioeconomic Status; Culture Norms, Beliefs About Mental Illness and Cultural Differences in Expression of Distress; Somatization: The Expression of Psychological Distress Through Bodily Means; Culture-Bound Syndromes.
- How Cultural Differences in Conceptualization of Illness and Expression of Distress Influence Help-Seeking PatternsHelp-Seeking, Diagnoses, and Their Relation to Treatment; How Cultural Differences in the Expression of Distress Influence Diagnostic Accuracy and Affect Prevalence Estimates for Me ... ; Meeting the Needs of Ethnic Minority and Immigrant Communities: Policy Implications; References; 4 The Formative Method for Adapting Psychotherapy; Phase 1: Generating Knowledge and Collaborating with Stakeholders; Community Mental Health Clinics and Treatment Providers.
- Traditional and Indigenous Medicines, Spiritual Leaders, and Healing MethodsPatient or Client Feedback; CBOs and Community Leaders; Phase 2: Integrating Generated Information With Theory and Empirical and Clinical Knowledge; Phase 3: Reviewing the Initial Culturally Adapted Clinical Intervention With Stakeholders and Revising the Culturally Adapt ... ; Phase 4: Testing the Culturally Adapted Intervention; Phase 5: Synthesizing Knowledge Produced by the Earlier Phases and Finalizing the Culturally Adapted Intervention; References.