AI Article Synopsis

  • Black women in the U.S. experience chronic stress from racism and oppression, leading to significant mental health disparities.
  • Ideologies surrounding Black women in society also influence psychiatric and neuroscience research, hindering a full understanding of how these social structures affect their mental health.
  • The article advocates for addressing these inequities through a Black feminist perspective by promoting culturally relevant research and intersectional approaches in order to foster social justice and improve mental health outcomes for Black women and marginalized groups.

Article Abstract

Black women in the United States are faced with unrelenting chronic stressors that are often driven by racism and oppression and that result in mental health inequities. Similar to common U.S. societal views of Black women, ideological values about Black women's lives also permeate psychiatry and neuroscience research to prevent likely impactful research that fully examines the role of social power structures in the biological embedding of racism. This article's overall aim is to highlight the most urgent areas to address in mental health inequities utilizing a Black feminist lens that include 1) culturally grounded and contextually relevant considerations for the biological embedding of racism on mental health outcomes for Black women across the lifespan and 2) intersectional frameworks that address mental health inequities ingrained in multiple marginalization. We conclude with a call to action informed by Black feminist thought for the field of neuroscience to make a concerted effort to address mental health inequities among Black women and other disenfranchised groups from a frame of compassion, cultural humility, and a continuous pursuit of social justice.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpsc.2022.08.007DOI Listing

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