Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Using one of the participant quotes in the Findings section of the Matheson et al. study, analyze it by first identifying the main themes in the quote. Pro - Writeden.com

Using one of the participant quotes in the Findings section of the Matheson et al. study, analyze it by first identifying the main themes in the quote. Pro

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Post the following:

  • Using one of the participant quotes in the Findings section of the Matheson et al. study, analyze it by first identifying the main themes in the quote.
  • Provide an interpretation of the quote (what is the speaker saying?). 
  • Discuss how this would specifically inform one intervention recommendation for social work practice with clients. Your recommendation can be on the micro, mezzo, or macro level (choose one).
  • Next, explain how you would adapt the practice recommendation that you identified so that it is culturally sensitive and relevant for a diverse cultural group (e.g., African American, Latinx, Asian American, or indigenous communities). Select only one group.
  • Choose a surface structure or deep structure adaptation that Fennig reviewed and provide two strategies for application with your selected group. Be as specific as you can, using citations to support your ideas.

 

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Content Analysis of Focus Groups Research Question 1: What are the barriers in implementing mental health services in the Asian American community?

• Research Design: Qualitative, Descriptive

• Research Method: Focus groups

• Participants: Healthcare providers Patient-Related Barriers

Social Stigma Associated With Mental Illness “. . . but also a lot of my patients have a fear of going to psychiatrists because of the social stigma . . .”(RT, pg. 1) “Because of the stigma it is hard to get patients to ask for help and . . .” (AW, pg. 2)

Financial Difficulties “. . .and many have financial difficulty and have to pay an additional fee for psychiatry.” (RT, pg. 1)

Cultural Differences in Help-Seeking

“It is easier sometimes to refer patients to someone else because a lot of times I find that the Chinese patients I see are unwilling to open up or trust.” (AW, pg. 2)

“We have to see why Asians go to see a health care provider, forget about whether it’s in the mental health profession, or even a regular clinician. Why does the patient see the provider . . . is it because they have seen a Chinese herbalist and have failed and have used their last efforts to see a Western doctor, that will put tremendous expectations on this relationship, as opposed to someone who comes to see the doctor for the first time and has faith [in] the Western doctor?” (CTS, pg. 7)

Service Provider-Related Barriers “Despite all the training, I have found that working with Chinese populations there are a lot of barriers.” (AW, pg. 2)

“Pass the Buck” Theme “It is easier sometimes to refer patients to someone else because a lot of times I find that the Chinese patients I see are unwilling to open up or trust.” (AW, pg. 2)

Lack of Training/Skills/Expertise

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“. . . and I find that I struggle with my own skills. I am trying to get some help in being a better primary care provider and getting my skills more fine- tuned for the population that I work with.” (AW, pg. 2) “On the Western provider side, we noticed that when a provider is confronted with a non-Western patient, they are reluctant to enter areas because they are not really sure if that behavior is natural to that culture. So that while they know pathology on the one hand, they are not sure if what they are seeing is pathological. I remember one Indian psychiatrist said that someone with schizophrenia in India has the same symptoms in New York, but you know, there are excuses sometimes and avoidance, so educating the general provider concerning what really can be expected is very important.” (RN, pg. 8) “My comment is very similar, there are very big knowledge gaps for providers and what providers bring to the situation . . .” (FA, pg. 8)

Cultural Assumptions “Well, what you have to think about is other areas, our own cultural biases. There are certain things that I make assumptions on without even knowing it just because of what I knew growing up, and I think these are areas we need to address.” (JG, pg. 7)

Systems Barriers

Primary Care Is the Access Point for Patients With Mental Health Conditions “. . . primary care as sort of the gatekeeper. Those are the guys that are picking up the symptoms and so I sort of see that this is a good project to enhance our understanding of this population.” (MM, pg. 2) Changing Financial Systems “Another issue is that there are financial issues that primary physicians often see that there is cost shifting going on where psychiatry or whomever else is telling us to do this new activity that is really shifting a responsibility.” (JS, pg. 4) Changing of Responsibilities “Another issue is that there are financial issues that primary physicians often see that there is cost shifting going on where psychiatry or whomever else is telling us to do this new activity that is really shifting a responsibility.” (JS, pg. 4)

Professional Medical/Psychiatry Culture

Differing Cultures and Ideologies Within Medical Profession “One major barrier is that there is a difference in physician culture. An internalist perceives a different way of treating a patient than a family care doctor,

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and the pediatrician looks at it differently than an internalist, and that certain cultures when they have certain specialty referral systems will feel differently when the specialty referral system is used less frequently, and we have found them being treated much differently.” (JS, pg. 4)

Miscellaneous

“We tend to forget that mental health problems are a spectrum; they may not be necessarily psychosis or dementia, manic depression, they may not be a DSM diagnosis, they may be lifestyle related. They are a state of flux; it is a spectrum. When a woman is having infertility, when a woman loses a pregnancy, when a woman delivers a baby and it is another girl, but she wanted a boy, or when she delivers a baby that she wanted, but the burden is too much. So it can be gyn issues, it could be ob issues, but they are not DSM categories, and I think that a barrier is that we do not acknowledge the existence of these kinds of things . . .” (PRF, pg. 6) “The other big thing that I think of is . . . when we do see these patients and when we do have the luxuries of identifying these issues that I have just outlined, that we try to squeeze these people into the diagnoses that I just described. So we make it into an anxiety disorder, or we make it into a depression when it could be just lifestyle related or culture related . . . ” (PRF, pg. 6)

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