A Cultural Competency Toolkit: Ten Grant Sites Share Lessons Learned
For organizations providing support to mental health consumers, “cultural competency”— the ability to reach out effectively and appropriately to individuals of different cultural backgrounds —is central to meeting the needs of a diverse community.
The Cultural Competency Initiative, which was launched in 2000, assisted consumer supporter organizations by providing funding and technical assistance as well as by disseminating information about innovative minority outreach programs.
Each chapter of the toolkit (below) provides an overview of one of ten model programs. Project goals and implementation plans are shared, project leaders share their expertise, and program materials are included in each chapter's appendices. NCSTAC hopes that this information will assist other consumer supporter organizations in their efforts to launch similar outreach programs.
Contents: (requires free Adobe Acrobat Reader)- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Alaska -
Chapter one discusses the Mental Health Association in Alaska’s
(MHAA’s) Mentor Project. With NCSTAC funding, MHAA flew five Native
Alaskans from the state’s most remote regions to Juneau to attend
a three-day leadership training to develop advocacy skills. Chapter
1 - Appendix
- Chapter 2 : Allegheny
County, Pennsylvania - Prior to this grant proposal, the
Mental Health Association of Allegheny County (MHAAC) participated
as a founding member in a local Multicultural Outreach and Education
Task Force. MHAAC believed that this massive outreach effort
was highly replicable, and chapter two discusses how this organization
used NCSTAC funding to prepare and disseminate a how-to manual
for replicating their project. Chapter
2 - Appendix
- Chapter 3 : Georgia -
Chapter three provides an overview of the National Mental Health
Association of Georgia’s Project HOPE, (Healing, Opportunity, Prevention
and Education). Project HOPE aimed to increase awareness in Georgia’s
African American community of the symptoms of and treatments for
depression. Chapter
3 - Appendix
- Chapter 4 : Hawaii -
Chapter four describes how the Mental Health Association in Hawaii
(MHAH) used its NCSTAC funding to strengthen its existing speakers
bureau by recruiting and training mental health consumers of different
cultural backgrounds. Over the course of this project, MHAH enlisted
eight Native Hawaiians and Asian Americans as consumer advocates. Chapter
4 - Appendix
- Chapter 5 : New
Mexico - Chapter five discuses NAMI-New Mexico’s (NAMI-NM’s)
Consumer Involvement Project. NAMI-NM offered a series of workshops
at seven different locations across the state to help consumers
to launch their own self-help and advocacy programs. Chapter
5 - Appendix
- Chapter 6 : Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania - Chapter six explains how the Mental Health
Association of South Eastern Pennsylvania (MHASP) built upon
its existing Mental Health/Aging Advocacy Project. MHASP trained
elderly consumers and their caregivers to advocate for the mental
health needs of older Americans in the Philadelphia area. Chapter
6 - Appendix
- Chapter 7 : South
Carolina - Aiken County, South Carolina is rated as one of
the top 100 places to retire in the United States and accordingly
has a large population of older Americans. Chapter seven provides
an overview of the Mental Health Association in Aiken County’s
efforts to found an Elder’s Task Force to help serve this population’s
needs. Chapter
7 - Appendix
- Chapter 8 : Texas -
Despite stereotypes to the contrary, mental illnesses among Asian
Americans are actually common. Chapter eight describes how Houston’s
Asian American Family Counseling Center designed and offered a
series of brown bag lunches where local mental health professionals
could learn more about working with the area’s Asian American communities. Chapter
8 - Appendix
- Chapter 9 : Utah -
Chapter nine explains how the Mental Health Association in Utah
organized a two-day conference where 200 mental health professionals
could learn about cultural competency. Conference workshops explored
working with Utah’s various minority populations: Native Americans,
Latinos, African Americans, Pacific Islanders and Asian Americans.
Additionally, one workshop focused on Deaf culture. Chapter
9 - Appendix
- Chapter 10 : Washington - Consumer Voices Are Born (CVAB), a consumer-run drop-in center, established a warm-line where individuals in the Clark County, Washington area facing mental health challenges could call in and discuss their problems with a peer. Chapter ten focuses on CVAB’s efforts to extend warm-line services to the county’s various ethnic communities. Chapter 10 - Appendix