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1.
Soc Work ; 64(2): 139-146, 2019 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30722067

ABSTRACT

African American marriages and relationships have strived to model the white patriarchal nuclear family model, but the experiences of slavery and contemporary structural racism have prevented the attainment of this model. Posttraumatic slave syndrome offers a framework that allows social workers to place African American experiences within a trauma-informed perspective and think about their implication for trauma-specific interventions. This article provides a brief overview of the traumatic experiences of African Americans as they relate to African American relationships, integrates the historical experiences of African Americans into a trauma-informed perspective to help social workers recognize the manifestations of trauma in African American relationships, and discusses implications for trauma-specific interventions to strengthen African American relationships.


Subject(s)
Black or African American/psychology , Enslavement/psychology , Family Characteristics , Interpersonal Relations , Marriage/psychology , Nuclear Family , Female , Humans , Male , Social Work
2.
Soc Work Public Health ; 30(5): 410-22, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26079819

ABSTRACT

A discussion of health equity should be intricately examined in policy and practice discourse about the healthcare industry. This article addresses health equity with strategies to institutionalize it through policy implementation. This discourse is relevant to social work because social workers are charged with elucidating conditions that are maniacal and disadvantageous to racial groups, undocumented workers, immigrants and women. Social workers engaged in policy practice should consider how these stakeholders are excluded from health equity, because of the lack of transformative policy implementation that addresses industry practices that encourage disparity and maintain equity. This article hopes to provide a helpful view of health equity.


Subject(s)
Health Policy , Health Status , Social Justice , Health Status Disparities , Humans , Policy Making , Social Work , United States
3.
J Evid Based Soc Work ; 7(5): 412-30, 2010 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21082471

ABSTRACT

This article is an initial exploration about the impact of ideological beliefs on helping services in the African American community. Newly infected HIV/AIDS cases place African Americans at 45% of such new cases, with African American women becoming infected at a rate 18 times that of Whites. Yet, helping services that are organic to African American women should be stronger through a discussion of cultural beliefs held in the community, where the genesis of helping services exists. Values and beliefs should be at the center of community partnerships, public media strategies, generalist-practice curricula in macro-level systems, and creating more space for relationship dialogue between African American men and women, which includes gender and racial distortions. Given the exponentially high numbers of HIV/AIDS cases in the African American community, a more earnest examination of values and beliefs is warranted.


Subject(s)
Black or African American , HIV Infections/ethnology , Social Work/organization & administration , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/ethnology , Community-Institutional Relations , Cultural Characteristics , Female , Health Education/organization & administration , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Humans , Male , Mass Media , Politics , Prejudice , Religion , Sex Factors
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