What's race got to do with it? A proposed framework to address racism's impacts on child and adolescent mental health in Canada.

J Can Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry

Director of Continuing Professional and Practice Development, Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Director of Post-Graduate Education, Psychiatry, Humber River Hospital, University of Toronto, Clinical Head, Outpatient Child and Youth, Humber River Hospital, University of Toronto, Secti

Published: May 2021


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Article Abstract

This commentary responds to current events that have highlighted the ways that systemic racism affects a wide variety of health outcomes. We specifically discuss how systemic racism adversely affects the mental health of children and adolescents in a Canadian context and use a structural framework to demonstrate how race is embedded in various Canadian systems and thus affects child and adolescent mental health in both conscious and unconscious ways throughout the lifespan. Experiences of systemic racism affect the mental health of Canadian young people in multiple complex and intersecting ways including access to care, experience of mental health services, and outcomes of care. We currently lack a national best practice framework for mental health professionals that unifies approaches to research, education, and clinical care for young racialized Canadians; in addition, concerted efforts to collect race-based data are lacking. We suggest that a blueprint for improved services for racialized young people in Canada would include: Development of a funded and sustainable research agenda responsive to community expertise, development and implementation of a Canadian Child and Adolescent task force focused on educational strategies on racism and service provision at both the postgraduate and continuing professional development (CPD) levels, and consideration of clinical parameters that improve access to, and experience of, care for Canadian racialized youth.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8056965PMC

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