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Supporting the Well-Being of Black Men and Boys

Participants in the APA 2024 program “Lifting as We Climb: Supporting the Mental Well-being of Black Men and Boys”: Nicholas St. Fleur, Science Journalist (formerly with STAT News); Arthur C. Evans Jr., Ph.D., CEO, APA; Taft Parsons, M.D., Vice President and Chief Psychiatric Officer, CVS Health; Anthony Estreet, Ph.D., M.B.A., LCSW-C, CEO, National Association of Social Workers; Shawn Boynes, former CEO, American Counseling Association (2022-25); and Malcolm Woodland, Ph.D., Executive Director, U.S. Congressional Caucus on the Commission of the Social Status of Black Men and Boys | Photo courtesy of the American Psychological Association

Leaders from psychology, psychiatry, social work, counseling, media, government, and beyond came together at the American Psychological Association (APA)’s annual convention to explore innovative solutions for reaching a group historically excluded from mental healthcare: Black men and boys.

This conversation, spearheaded by APA’s CEO, Arthur C. Evans Jr., Ph.D., highlighted the importance of upstream prevention efforts, peer support programs, and meeting people where they are.

“I feel a sense of responsibility to lean in and to do something that’s going to bring about change,” said Shawn Boynes, former CEO of the American Counseling Association (2022-25). “We’ve been talking a lot, but what are the meaningful actions we can take?”

Evans described several priorities of APA’s effort, including a focus on population health and mental health literacy. The group also used the platform to share ideas with the larger community of mental health and behavioral health professionals and to spearhead creative thinking about ways to improve mental healthcare for Black men and boys. The next steps will be to continue studying, building, and advocating for programs and policies that support mental health and well-being.

Rethinking misconceptions

Redefining mental healthcare for Black men and boys first requires a recognition of the unique challenges they face. For example, constant reports of police brutality can lead to ongoing thoughts about personal safety, adding layers of excessive worry, tension, and panic attacks that may not fit within standard interventions (or support) to manage clinical levels of anxiety.

“When you’re feeling that kind of trauma, that kind of anxiety, it has a tremendous effect not only on our mental health but on our physical health as well. We’re not only seeing it but also living it,” said psychologist Malcolm Woodland, Ph.D., executive director of the U.S. Congressional Caucus on the Commission of the Social Status of Black Men and Boys.

Critically examining cultural misconceptions about Black men and boys is another key step in rethinking mental well-being. Narratives tend to focus on negatives rather than positives, such as the portrayal of Black men as absentee parenting partners without also highlighting the presence and attentiveness that many Black men bring to their families, according to Boynes.

Promoting mental strength

A further barrier to delivering care is one often repeated to Anthony Estreet, Ph.D., MBA, LCSW-C, CEO of the National Association of Social Workers: “Black people don’t do therapy.” However, he found it doesn’t tell the whole story of a population that often feels more comfortable seeking support from people in their community, such as clergy members, trusted mentors, or barbers.

Estreet used those insights to start rethinking both how and where he talked with Black men and boys. Instead of using language that highlights deficiencies and reinforces stigma (“mental illness,” for example), he began using terms like “mental strength.” Leaders agree that shifting the narrative and terminology around mental health is a key part of reaching this underserved group.

Estreet also meets with people where they feel at ease, such as on the basketball court rather than in the therapist’s office. “How do we do therapy where we are actually meeting Black men and boys in the spaces where they feel most comfortable to talk about these issues?”

A broader view of health

Broadening the way mental health is funded and addressed will be critical. APA endorses a population health approach, which places a high value on prevention and early intervention efforts that can help address challenges before they become life-altering.

“With our nation’s current model for mental health, people require a diagnosis to receive help, which inadvertently ignores nearly 75% of the population. We are saying, instead, that everyone can improve their psychological health, no matter where they fall on the mental health continuum,” Evans said.

Research shows, for example, that help-seeking for mental health services is higher in communities that have more gun violence, and not just among people who witnessed a shooting or lost loved ones.

“That suggests that one’s psychological health is affected by a range of factors,” Evans said. “Therefore, we need a more sophisticated way of thinking about mental health and a broader set of strategies to inform our approach.”

Having more Black male therapists is crucial, but it’s just one part of the solution.

“Across all of our strategies — from building up the clinical workforce to advocating for policy change — we need to work with allies,” said Taft Parsons, M.D., vice president and chief psychiatric officer of CVS Health. “It’s going to take all of us partnered together to truly make a difference in the mental health of Black men and boys.”

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