|
 |
Developing Cultural Competence in Disaster Mental Health Programs:
Guiding Principles and Recommendations
Introduction
Background and Overview
Disasters affect hundreds of thousands of people in the United States annually.
Between 1993 and 1998, the American Red Cross responded to more than 322,000 disaster
incidents in the United States and provided financial assistance to more than
600,000 families (American Red Cross, 2000). In 1997 alone, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) responded to 43 major disasters in 27 States and three
western Pacific Island territories (FEMA, 2000). In recent years, human-caused
disasters have been a major challenge. Such events include the 1992 civil unrest
in Los Angeles, the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma
City, and the September 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New
York and the Pentagon in Arlington.
Disaster crisis counseling is a specialized service that involves rapid assignment
and temporary deployment of staff who must meet multiple demands and work in marginal
conditions and in unfamiliar settings such as shelters, recovery service centers,
and mass care facilities. The major objective of disaster mental health operations
is to mobilize staff to disaster sites so that they can attend to the emotional
needs of survivors. In the past, these responses tended to be generic; little
or no effort was made to tailor resources to the characteristics of a specific
population. With time and experience, however, service providers and funding organizations
have become increasingly aware that race, ethnicity, and culture may have a profound
effect on the way in which an individual responds to and copes with disaster.
Today, those in the field of disaster mental health recognize that sensitivity
to cultural differences is essential in providing mental health services to disaster
survivors.
Integrating cultural competence in the temporary structure and high-intensity
work environment of a disaster relief operation is a challenge. Increasing cultural
competence, not a one-time activity, is a long-term process that requires fundamental
changes at the institutional level. Because both culture and the nature of disasters
are dynamic, these changes must be followed by ongoing efforts to ensure that
the needs of those affected by disaster are met.
The primary purpose of this guide is to provide background information, guiding
principles, recommendations, and resources for developing culturally competent
disaster mental health services. Disaster mental health providers and workers
can use and adapt the guidelines set forth in this document to meet the unique
characteristics of individuals and communities affected directly or indirectly
by a full range of natural and human-made disasters.
Designed to supplement information already available through CMHS, SAMHSA,
and other sources, Developing Cultural Competence in Disaster Mental Health
Programs highlights important common issues relating to cultural competence
and to disaster mental health. It provides guidance for improving cultural competence
in support of disaster mental health services.
The following issues are key to the recommendations set forth in this guide:
- Cultural competence requires system-wide change. It must
be manifested at every level of an organization, including policy making,
administration, and direct service provision. Therefore, for disaster mental
health services to be effective, cultural competence must be reflected in
disaster mental health plans. For additional information on building mental
health systems capacity for disaster mental health response and recovery,
readers may wish to review Disaster Response and Recovery: A Strategic
Guide (DHHS, Rev. ed, in press).
- Cultural competence requires an understanding of the historical,
social, and political events that affect the physical and mental health of
culturally diverse groups. Issues such as racism, discrimination, war, trauma,
immigration patterns, and poverty—which reinforce cultural differences
and distinguish one cultural group from another—must be considered (Hernandez
and Isaacs, 1998). For a descriptive summary of historical background, patterns,
and events, as well as detailed demographic and health profiles of individual
cultural groups, readers may wish to refer to Mental Health: Culture,
Race, and Ethnicity—A Supplement to Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon
General (DHHS, 2001) and to Cultural Competence Standards in Managed
Care Mental Health Services: Four Underserved/Underrepresented Racial/Ethnic
Groups (DHHS, 2000b).
- Precise definitions of the terms “race,” “ethnicity,”
and “culture” are elusive. As social concepts, these terms have
many meanings, and those meanings evolve over time (DHHS, 2001). This guide
espouses a broad definition of culture that includes not only race and ethnicity
but also gender, age, language, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation,
disability, literacy level, spiritual and religious practices, individual
values and experiences, and other factors. This guide uses the phrases “cultural
groups” and “racial and ethnic minority groups”¹ to
refer to the Nation’s diverse, multicultural groups and individuals.
- The operational definition of cultural competence provided
in this guide is based on the principles of cultural competence described
in Towards a Culturally Competent System of Care (Cross et al., 1989).
Many Federal, State, and local public mental health systems, as well as organizations
in the private sector, have adopted the principles presented in this document.
__________________________________
¹The major racial and ethnic minority groups referred to in this publication
are African Americans (blacks), American Indians and Alaska Natives, Asian Americans,
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islanders, and Hispanic Americans (Latinos).
The authors recognize that opinions about which labels are appropriate differ
and acknowledge that heterogeneous subpopulations exist within each of these
populations. These categories, which were established by the Office of Management
and Budget in 1997, are used because they are widely accepted and used by service
providers in the public and private sectors.
Table of Contents | Previous | Next
|
 |