NASHVILLE, Tenn. ñ Mental health professionals may be missing at least five novel mental health problems because the impact of racism is not considered when determining mental health, a new report suggests.
Tony N. Brown, Vanderbilt University assistant professor of sociology, asserts in the report that standard mental health criteria may fail to capture a true picture of problems across racial groups. That failure in turn, leads to some psychological problems going unclassified and undiagnosed.
"We don’t know what is deviant if we don’t know what the norm is and the norm is dictated by society’s beliefs, which vary across racial groups. For example, the black community may question the sanity of blacks who bleach their skin or blacks who ‘hate being black,’ but these lay definitions of poor mental health are ignored by mental health professionals," Brown said.
"Combining lay and clinical definitions and considering racism’s impact on mental health could offer a more complete picture of mental health disorders," Brown added.
The report, "Critical Race Theory Speaks to the Sociology of Mental Health: Mental Health Problems Produced by Racial Stratification," appears in the September edition of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior published by the American Sociological Association.
Mental health research has hinted that a complex relationship between racism and mental health exists ñ but the link has not yet been fully explored.
The conventional wisdom in the field of mental health is that the more stress a person is exposed to, the more likely it is that he or she will suffer from poor mental health. However, community epidemiological studies conducted during the past 20 years indicate that blacks, relative to whites, exhibit about the same, or in some cases lower rates of psychiatric disorder ñ despite blacks’ stress levels being compounded by racism.
Brown believes racism’s not being factored into the mental health equation accounts for some of the disparity.
In the report, Brown proposes five mental health problems related to racism that he believes are the most prevalent and impairing. He focuses on these five because available evidence offers strongest support that these problems exist.
They are:
Nihilistic Tendencies ñ self-defeating attempts to survive in a society that systematically frustrates normal efforts for natural human growth. According to the report, this mental health problem is likely to affect blacks that, finding the doors to legitimate survival blocked, have chosen destructive means to achieve immediate needs and desires out of an urgency to survive.
Anti-self Issues ñ a mental health problem that describes how blacks feel estranged from their racial selves and seek to escape their blackness and any connection to other blacks. Estranged blacks have internalized negative notions about being black that result in disdain for their racial group and their trying to create social and physical space between themselves and their group.
Suppressed Anger Expression ñ denial of anger and aggression that leads to false affability, passivity, resignation and ultimately withdrawal or inward self-destruction. In social or workplace settings, blacks may feel they are denied the liberty of expressing anger about racial issues which can build up over time to detrimental effects.
Delusional Denial Tendencies ñ a mental health problem that can affect both blacks and whites. In response to racism, blacks may repress unpleasant or painful ideas from reaching the conscious level and ultimately generating disability. Researchers have also theorized that whites are socialized to believe that they do not benefit from racial oppression and that they do not need to consider the role race plays in their lives.
Extreme Racial Paranoia ñ a mental health problem typically affecting whites who hold illusions of exaggerated self-importance based on race and who experience unreasonable discomfort at the thought of having an interpersonal interaction with a black person. Brown cites research that has called extreme racial paranoia among whites a serious mental illness.
Brown suggests that more research is needed to verify these mental health problems and to explore the relationship between racism and mental health across all racial groups.
He also cautions against the acceptance of standardized concepts of mental health because the dominant group in society often defines normalcy and disease. He cites the example of white psychiatrists in the 19th century who claimed black slaves suffered from "drapetomania" ñ a "psychiatric disorder indicated by a desire to run away from slavery."
Media Contact: (615) 322-NEWS princine.l.lewis@vanderbilt.edu