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Home » Mental Disorders Diagnosed in Childhood

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 27 No. 1
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CROSS-CULTURAL PSYCHIATRY 

Cultural Considerations in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Understanding Cultural Differences for a Better Therapeutic Alliance

Toby Measham, MD, Jaswant Guzder, MD, Cécile Rousseau, MD, and Lucie Nadeau, MD | January 11, 2010
Dr Measham is child psychiatrist and assistant professor, Dr Guzder is child psychiatrist and associate professor, Dr Rousseau is child psychiatrist and associate professor, and Dr Nadeau is child psychiatrist and assistant professor in the department of psychiatry at McGill University in Montreal. The authors report no conflicts of interest concerning the subject matter of this article.

The role of school-based services

School-based prevention programs play a key role in promoting the mental health of children from immigrant and ethnocultural communities. Ecological models of intervention that address the whole-school environment are useful because they provide a systemic understanding, help counter concerns about stigma in accessing support, and propose support and training for teachers so that they can help their students without becoming too distressed. This model also insists on parent-school interactions, which should be understood both in terms of cultural differences and also as reflecting minority-majority relations between communities and host country institutions.

(MORE: Cultural and Ethnic Issues in Psychopharmacology)

Classroom-based activities help children assimilate past and present experiences by presenting these as learning opportunities. This facilitates emotional expression of their experiences and promotes positive relationships within the classroom and society.18 Some prevention programs use specific treatment modalities, such as artistic expression, to support the transformation of past and present adversity through creativity and metaphorical representations and also to foster the development of solidarity among children.19

Consultation to remote communities: fostering resilience by supporting community strengths

Remote communities, including First Nations and Inuit, face specific challenges for delivery of mental health care adapted to local sociocultural realities. Resources are often scarce and health care professionals often assume a greater diversity of roles by addressing physical and mental health issues. Culturally specific or local interpretations of illnesses can be misinterpreted, especially if the clinician does not share the same cultural background with the community. At the same time, visiting clinicians can develop an intimate understanding of the community within a long-term relationship as allies of local care providers.

The model of collaborative care between professionals in mental health and those working in proximity with communities is a useful one to address the mental health needs of children and youth living in remote communities.20 Collaborative care models bring together expertise in mental health and in local resources and contingencies, including the frequent extra burden of multiple roles placed on service providers and the unofficial networking roles created internally by communities.

Collaborative care offers an opportunity to solidify support for children and their families within their communities. Travel to distant urban settings is reserved for particular diagnostic or treatment issues, because this can add an additional stressor to children and their families. Adapting services to community realities takes into account local strengths and traditional interpretations of mental health problems to co-construct strategies that support the healing of children within their families and communities. A collaborative approach includes addressing the need for culturally responsive services and a com-mitment to support social, cultural, and economic determinants of health.

Conclusion

Addressing cultural considerations in the mental health care of children from immigrant and ethnocultural communities implies that we address needs for interpreters or culture brokers where necessary and that we see our therapeutic tools and services as well as ourselves, our patients, and our communities in a new light. Cultural psychiatry proposes openness to social and cultural issues allied with good comprehensive general mental health care. Cultural issues are seen as an integral part of the assessment and diagnostic process as well as a key element in the formulation of a clinical and social intervention plan framed within culturally diverse developmental and social agendas. Culturally respectful services need to be grounded in an ecological framework of care where social, economic, and cultural determinants of heath are considered as intrinsic contributors to a person’s well-being.

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Jan 2010 SR

Introduction: Cross-Cultural Psychiatry

Religion, Spirituality, and Mental Health

Cultural Considerations in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

Cultural and Ethnic Issues in Psychopharmacology





References
1. Fazel M, Wheeler J, Danesh J. Prevalence of serious mental disorder in 7000 refugees resettled in western countries: a systematic review. Lancet. 2005;365:1309-1314.
2. Rousseau C, Drapeau A. Mental health, chapter 11. In: Health and Wellness, Recent Immigrants to Quebec: A Mutual Adaptation? Report of a Study With Cultural Communities 1998-1999. Montréal: Les Publications du Québec; 2002:211-245.
3. Jaycox LH, Stein BD, Kataoka SH, et al. Violence exposure, post traumatic stress disorder, and depressive symptoms among recent immigrant schoolchildren. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2002;41:1104-1110.
4. Gunew SM. Haunted Nations: The Colonial Dimensions of Multiculturalism. New York: Routledge; 2003.
5. Beiser M, Hou F, Hyman I, Tousignant M. Poverty, family process, and the mental health of immigrant children in Canada. Am J Public Health. 2002;92:220-227.
6. Hassan G, Rousseau C. Protecting children: issues of intervention in intercultural context. L’ARIC Bull. 2008;37:37-50.
7. Rousseau C, Hassan G, Measham T, et al. From the family universe to the outside world: family relations, school attitude, and perception of racism in Caribbean and Filipino adolescents. Health Place. 2009;15:721-730.
8. Hsieh E. Interpreters as co-diagnosticians: overlapping roles and services between providers and interpreters. Soc Sci Med. 2007;64:924-937.
9. Bibeau G. Cultural psychiatry in a creolizing world: questions for a new research agenda. Transcult Psychiatry. 1997;34:9-41.
10. Nadeau L, Measham T. Immigrants and mental health services: increasing collaboration with other service providers. Can Child Adolesc Psychiatr Rev. 2005;14:73-76.
11. Rousseau C, Measham T, Bathiche-Suidan M. DSM-IV, culture and child psychiatry. J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2008;17:69-75.
12. Bathiche M. The Prevalence of ADHD Symptoms in a Culturally Diverse and Developing Country: Lebanon. Montreal: McGill University; 2008.
13. Kirmayer LJ, Rousseau C, Jarvis GE, et al. The cultural context of clinical assessment. In: Tasman A, Lieberman J, Kay J, eds. Psychiatry. New York: John Wiley & Sons; 2003:19-29.
14. Ecklund K, Johnson WB. Toward cultural competence in child intake assessments. Professional Psychol Res Pract. 2007;38:356-362.
15. Novins DK, Bechtold DW, Sack WH, et al. The DSM-IV outline for cultural formulation: a critical demonstration with American Indian children. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 1997;36:1244-1251.
16. Shatter TG, Steiner H. An application of DSM-IV’s outline for cultural formulation: understanding conduct disorder in Latino adolescents. Aggress Violent Behav. 2006;11:655-663.
17. Egger HL. Psychiatric assessment of young children. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am. 2009;18:559-580.
18. Green J, Howes F, Waters E, et al. Promoting the social and emotional health of primary school-aged children: reviewing the evidence for school-based interventions. Int J Ment Health Promo. 2005;7:30-36.
19. Rousseau C, Guzder J. School-based prevention programs for refugee children. Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am. 2008;17:533-549.
20. Pautler K, Gagné MA. Annotated bibliography of collaborative mental health care. September 2005. http://www.ccmhi.ca/en/products/documents/03_AnnotatedBibliography_EN.pdf. Accessed December 17, 2009.


 
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