Special Report: Black Mental Health Resources In Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, And Los Angeles

Written by Ann Brown

Although African Americans are 20 percent more likely to experience serious mental health issues due to various factors, they are also less open to seeking professional help. Just one in three Black people who struggle with mental health issues will seek out the appropriate treatment.

The hesitancy to seek professional mental health is due to a misunderstanding of what mental health actually is, said child and adolescent psychologist Tyish Hall Brown, Ph.D., director of the behavioral health program at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

Many people wrongly think that you only need to see a mental health professional during a crisis, Hall Brown said in an interview onWeb MD.

There is also mistrust of the medical field by Black people due to years of unauthorized experimentation and mistreatment such as the notorious Tuskegee Experiment. During the Tuskegee Experiment, conducted between 1932 and 1972, the U.S. Public Health Service withheld syphilis treatment from Black male patients in Alabama and lied about it.

There is also the problem of African Americans being misdiagnosed at higher rates than white patients.

A lack of Black clinicians is also a problem.

Patients want a culturally competent counselor. For Black patients, that would mean having a Black therapist. This can be difficult to achieve as only 4 percent of social workers and 2 percent of psychiatrists and psychologists are Black, Web MD reported.

Even if a therapist is found, some Black patients might find it difficult to pay for services. The average cost of psychotherapy in the U.S. ranges from $100 to $200 per session (depending on the state), according to Forbes. Prohibitive insurance costs often make it more difficult for low-income individuals to get treatment. African Americans have the lowest rates of health care insurance of any ethnic group.

“Much of the push back against seeking treatment stems from ideas along the lines of: We have survived so much adversity, and now someone is going to say that there’s something wrong with us,” said former University of Southern California Clinical Associate Professor Ruth White in an article in the college’s blog in 2019. White specializes in stress management, community-based intervention strategies and mental health advocacy.

There is also a belief by some in the community that mental care issues can be “prayed away.” African Americans are among the most religious of any racial or ethnic group in the U.S., with 87 percent reporting a formal religious affiliation, according to studies by the Pew Research Center.

One in four people will deal with a mental illness at some point during their lives, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported.

Here are some Black mental health resources in Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles, and beyond.

Nationwide Black mental health resources

Atlanta Black mental health resources

Houston health resources

Dallas directory

Chicago health and wellness

Los Angeles resource list

Photo by RODNAE Productions: https://www.pexels.com/photo/photo-of-man-and-woman-sitting-beside-window-7468258/

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