Monday, December 12, 2022

Multicultural Counseling


 

Multicultural Counseling

Clients seek therapy for multiple reasons, they are looking for support, suggestions, answers, and to be heard.  Having the tools and skills available to assist everyone requires awareness.  Counselors must be aware of their own cultural values and biases, aware of their client’s worldview, and how to use culturally appropriate intervention methods where needed.  Cultural competence is a model of developing skills, knowledge, and self-awareness to be more effective working with a diverse population.  To become more culturally competent, one must learn about their own heritage, family, and representation style, learn about other cultures, work with diverse groups, then grow through experience (Jackson, 2020).  

            Therapists learn early on that effective counseling can rewire the brain.  Clients seek help because of issues like poverty, neglect, abuse, and addictions, along with many other problems that involve cultural oppression.  These issues, including stress, cause 80% of medical issues and reduce one’s cognitive and emotional skills.  Changing the way clients think, feel, and behave adds new neuron connections and promotes resilience (Ivey et al, 2016).  Patients want to be heard and understood, that is the foundation of counseling, but knowing how to listen and how to relate requires cultural competency.

            Therapists need to act like teachers, consultants, coaches, and mentors.  Building trust with the patient requires “being” with them in times of trouble and acknowledging their victories.  To fully immerse yourself into the patient’s life situation, you must first be aware of yourself.  Self-reflect on how your different social identities like religion, gender, generation, education, and ethnicity has influenced your worldview.  Then, by valuing others, be curious.  Demonstrate a willingness to learn and respond from a genuine place.  Ask them questions and learn about their perspectives.  Having high cultural humility, we have an accurate view of ourselves and respect for others.  Studies have shown that patients who perceive their therapist with high levels of cultural humility experience improvement in their counseling (Shaw, 2016).  Also, remember one-size doesn’t fit all.  How one person views an event, another person’s perspective can be completely different.  

            “Multicultural awareness enriches uniqueness only when it allows us to become more aware of how much each person is different from another (Ivey et al, 2016).  There are different approaches that allow us to recognize the multidimensionality of all clients in comprehensive ways, a well known model is called the RESPECTFUL model.  RESPECTFUL is an acronym for religion or spiritual identity, economic standing, sexual identity, psychological maturity, ethnicity, or cultural background, chronological, meaning the development of challenges, trauma, family, uniqueness, and location (10 multicultural factors to consider in counseling, 2017).  Knowing about the patient’s histories, values, attitudes, and behaviors makes establishing empathy, teaching, building rapport, and analyzing feedback more accurate.  The goal is to find a “common ground” through cultural diversity.

            Culturally sensitive therapy emphasizes the therapist’s understanding of a client’s background and respecting differences in opinions, values, and attitudes to provide the best treatment approach.  Gaining and maintaining cultural competence is done by understanding one’s own culture and how it influences the relationship with the client.  It can be strengthened through education, self-reflection, and therapy.  Patients that see that their therapist understands them and see how certain events can affect their lives, tend to fare better within their counseling sessions.  Knowing when to use cultural opportunities and deviate the therapeutic approaches makes a skilled, multicultural therapist.

References

10 multicultural factors to consider in counseling. (2017, April 5). Online counseling programs.  https://onlinecounselingprograms.com/resources/multicultural-counseling-model/

Ivey, A. E., Ivey, M. B., & Zalaquett, C. P. (2016). Essentials of intentional interviewing. New York: Cengage. ISBN: 978-1-305-39955-6.

Jackson, J. (2020, July 6). 5 ways to be a culturally responsive therapist. Mental Health Match.  https://mentalhealthmatch.com/articles/for-therapists/culturally-responsive-therapist

Shaw, S. (2016, December 27). Practicing cultural humility. Counseling Today.  https://www.aipc.net.au/articles/five-counselling-microskills/




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