logo
Mass. Black therapists trying to diversify the workforce face an uphill battle

Mass. Black therapists trying to diversify the workforce face an uphill battle

Boston Globe10 hours ago

Advertisement
'We took the good and left the bad, and helped create this,' Labissiere, one of the clinic's cofounders, said from the Hyde Park Avenue office.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Labissiere and Wynn are rarities in this grueling industry: Black clinicians who have stuck around and own their own practice. The Child and Family Wellness Center isone of just a few Black-owned behavioral health practices in Massachusetts.
In interviews with the Globe, 10 Black mental health care providers, advocates, and public officials agreed several systemic barriers keep the workforce from diversifying. The deep-seated stigma of mental illness among Black
people, the time and financial costs of finishing school, and the biases embedded in the field's license exams are roadblocks for diversifying the workforce, which already suffers from massive turnover and vacancy rates.
Related
:
Advertisement
The societal costs are immense.
The
experienced these symptoms at higher rates,
said Gemima St. Louis, vice president for workforce initiatives and specialty training and clinical psychology professor at Williams James College in Newton.
As the mental health crises that COVID-19 drew out persist, stakeholders worry the behavioral health workforce won't be able to meet this rising demand with culturally competent care.
'We have a workforce that is insufficient, a workforce that lacks the diversity that is represented in the communities that have the greatest needs for mental health services,' St. Louis said.
Related
:
Advocates are introducing measures to tackle the representation gap at its root. Clinicians working in underserved communities can have some of their student debt covered through
The people working to diversify the behavioral health workforce are chipping away at a profession that has historically been for white and affluent individuals.
A 2023
Advertisement
One in 10 respondents in behavioral health leadership roles identified as non-Hispanic Black. Black respondents made up 9 percent of the survey's independently licensed clinicians, meaning they don't need supervision to provide treatment. Only 7.6 percent of behavioral health physicians — professionals with medical degrees — were Black.
The lack of representation within the sector doesn't match the range of people needing these services, advocates say. A separate survey of insured residents across Massachusetts found that one in 10 non-Hispanic Black residents reported poor mental health in 2021, along with 15 percent of Hispanic residents.
One barrier driving these disparities precedes any roadblocks Black clinicians are facing in their field: mental health care's taboo nature in their community.
Black people 'might have a little bit more wealth and more opportunities, but we've never really had a chance to really process our struggles in this country,' said Nieisha Deed, founder of
Recruitment into the sector can be happenstance, instead of something instilled from an early age. Larry Higginbottom, CEO
of The Osiris Group clinic in Roxbury, stumbled across 'the mental health field' during a chance conversation in the late '80s with Omar Reid, a local pioneer of Black psychology and mental health.
Advertisement
It was a foreign concept, but '[Reed] planted a seed,'
Higginbottom, now 71, said.
For Melanie Robinson Findlay, owner of Upwards 'N' Onwards, an independent therapy practice in Hyde Park,
the death of a best friend during high school propelled her into social work. By the time she pursued a doctorate, she had 18 years of clinical social work experience, completed a clerkship, and was even appointed to the state's Board of Registration of Social Workers.
But this didn't seem like enough. She noticed her peers would find supervisors with ease. Meanwhile, 'I always felt I had to prove myself.'
'What was I missing that they have?' Robinson Findlay said. 'And when you control for all the things, there's only one thing that pops out.'
Learning about the craft is only the first hurdle to entering the industry. It costs hundreds for
Mental health counselors, clinical social workers, psychologists, and other professionals within the field must complete thousands of hours to qualify for a license, some of which have to be under direct supervision from another practitioner.
Labissiere said the onus for supervision is placed on the aspiring clinician; they must find someone who is willing to sign off on their application and in turn, lose an employee that keeps their own practice afloat.
'These are gatekeeper positions,' Labissiere said. 'If you don't have an organization ... pushing you to become licensed, we get stuck.'
Advertisement
Wynn worries this mentality might choke off the next generation of clinicians of color, which is already a small group.
'People look at it as competition, but there's more than enough clients in need,' Wynn said. 'It's not a competition. It's a collaboration.'
While navigating the many stressors of entering the workforce, many aspiring social workers aren't taught the financial literacy needed to start and sustain independent practices, said Malaka Mims, president of the Greater Boston Association of Black Social Workers. So many social workers are focused on passing the exam, she said, that they often say, 'I don't know how to be a business owner.'
'Social workers are trained to help others, but the field must also prioritize self care and equip social workers to care for ourselves,' Mims said.
For Robinson Findlay, of Upwards 'N' Onwards, running her own practice has been a longtime dream, but it comes with its own challenges. She has scaled her fees down to accommodate low-income clients, and says she is owed thousands in private insurance reimbursements. She makes up with consulting, lecturing, and a postdoctoral fellowship.
Robinson Findlay can barely afford to do this, but she can't refuse a client's request. 'Even if I say no to one, that's too many.'
This story was produced by the Globe's
team, which covers the racial wealth gap in Greater Boston. You can sign up for the newsletter
.
Tiana Woodard can be reached at

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

"Devastated and heartbroken": Trump cuts LGBTQ+ youth services on 988 suicide hotline
"Devastated and heartbroken": Trump cuts LGBTQ+ youth services on 988 suicide hotline

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

"Devastated and heartbroken": Trump cuts LGBTQ+ youth services on 988 suicide hotline

The Trump administration has removed the "Press 3 option" from the national 988 Suicide & Crisis Hotline. The "Press 3 option" was available since 2022 for LGBTQ+ callers looking to speak with a mental health provider specializing in LGBTQ+ mental health care. The service will be shut down formally on July 17. In a statement released on Tuesday, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) said it was ending the service to "focus on all help seekers, including those previously served through the Press 3 option." The statement also said that the hotline will "no longer silo" what it called "LGB+ services," notably missing the T. "I am devastated and heartbroken," said Jaymes Black, CEO of advocacy organization The Trevor Project, in a video posted to Instagram. "Half a million LGBTQ young people reached out to 988 last year and pressed 3," Black said. "They found trained hearts waiting to help." Black described the "lifeline" for youths in crisis as being "cut" by SAMHSA. The Trevor Project was the contracted third party used by the hotline to provide the "press 3 option." In its statement, SAMHSA noted that the federally allocated $33 million for the option in 2024 was entirely spent by June 2025. It describes the funds as having gone to "support the subnetworks" of the service. "Your life has meaning," Black said in the video, speaking to LGBTQ+ youth. "You are our future, and we will never stop fighting for you."

Pandemic preparedness ‘dramatically eroding' under Trump, experts say
Pandemic preparedness ‘dramatically eroding' under Trump, experts say

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pandemic preparedness ‘dramatically eroding' under Trump, experts say

Amid controversial dismissals for independent advisers and staff at health agencies, alongside lackluster responses to the bird flu and measles outbreaks, experts fear the US is now in worse shape to respond to a pandemic than before 2020. H5N1, which has received less attention under the Trump administration than from Biden's team, is not the only influenza virus or even the only variant of bird flu with the potential to spark a pandemic. But a subpar response to the ongoing US outbreak signals a larger issue: America is not ready for whatever pathogen will sweep through next. 'We have not even remotely maintained the level of pandemic preparedness – which needed a lot of work, as we saw from the Covid pandemic,' said Angela Rasmussen, an American virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. 'But now, we essentially have no pandemic preparedness.' Related: Bird flu reinfections at US poultry farms highlight need for vaccines, experts say 'I'm concerned on a number of fronts,' said Jennifer Nuzzo, professor of epidemiology and director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University School of Public Health. Those concerns include a lack of quality information from officials, weakened virus monitoring systems, and public health reductions at the federal, state and local levels. 'The thing that I am most concerned about is the veracity of information coming out of the health agencies,' Nuzzo said. In the ongoing outbreaks of measles, for example, Robert F Kennedy Jr, the secretary of health and human services, has downplayed the severity of the disease, spread misinformation about the highly effective vaccine to prevent measles, and pushed unproven treatments. 'The communications on measles gives me deep worries about what would happen in a pandemic,' Nuzzo said. 'If a pandemic were to occur today, the only thing we would have to protect ourselves on day one would be information.' The H5N1 outbreak has been plagued by incomplete information, an issue that began in the Biden administration but has amplified under Trump. In Arizona, 6 million chickens were killed or culled at a Hickman's Family Farms location because of H5N1 in May. That's about 95% of the company's hen population in the state. Hundreds of workers, including inmate laborers, are now being dismissed as Arizona braces for egg shortages. We're not testing – it's not that there are no new cases Angela Rasmussen Yet even as H5N1 outbreaks continue to spread on farms and wreak havoc on the food supply, no new bird flu cases have been reported in people for months. 'I am concerned that we may not be finding new infections in humans,' Nuzzo said – and a lack of testing may be the culprit. 'We're not testing – it's not that there are no new cases,' Rassmussen said. The last bird flu case in a person was listed by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on 23 February. At that point, at least 830 people in the US had been tested after contact with sick animals. This kind of testing – monitoring the health of people who regularly work with H5N1-infected animals – is how the vast majority of cases (64 out of 70) have been found in this outbreak. But then, several CDC officials overseeing the bird flu response were fired on 1 April. Since then, only about 50 people in the US have been tested after exposure to sick animals – and no positive cases have been announced. It's also been difficult to understand the extent of the outbreak and how the virus spreads among animals. 'We still just don't have a good picture of the scope and scale of this outbreak – we never really have. And until we have that, we're not going to be able to contain it,' Rasmussen said. 'It's extremely bad,' she continued. 'We don't have any information about what's happening right now. The next pandemic could be starting, and we just don't know where that's happening, and we don't have any ability to find out.' We're seeing health departments scrambling. That infrastructure is just dramatically eroding Jennifer Nuzzo Huge reductions in the public health workforce and resources has led to less monitoring of outbreaks, known as disease surveillance. 'Cutting back on that surveillance is leaving us more in the dark,' Nuzzo said. The CDC clawed back $11.4bn in Covid funding in March. This funding was used to monitor, test, vaccinate and otherwise respond to public health issues at the state, local, territorial and tribal level. 'We're seeing health departments scrambling,' Nuzzo said. 'That infrastructure is just dramatically eroding.' International monitoring programs to address outbreaks before they expand across borders have also been cancelled. 'We have taken for granted all of those protections, and I fear that we are poised to see the consequences,' Nuzzo said. Trump's crackdown on immigration also poses a major challenge in detecting cases and treating patients during outbreaks. 'A lot of the people who are most at risk are strongly disincentivized to report any cases, given that many of them are undocumented or are not US citizens,' Rasmussen said. 'Nobody wants to go get tested if they're going to end up in an Ice detention facility.' When cases are not detected, that means patients are not able to access care. Although it's rare for people to become sick with H5N1, for instance – the virus is still primarily an avian, not a human, influenza – this variant of bird flu has a 52% mortality rate globally among people with known infections. Allowing a deadly virus to spread and mutate under the radar has troubling implications for its ability to change into a human influenza without anyone knowing. And if such changes were detected, widening gaps in communication could be the next hurdle for preventing a pandemic, Nuzzo said. 'Communication is our most important public health intervention. People, in order to be able to know how to protect themselves, need to have access to facts, and they need to believe in the messengers. And the communication around the measles outbreaks are deeply eroding our standing with the American people.' Even stockpiled vaccines and other protective measures, like personal protective equipment, take time to distribute, Nuzzo added. 'And flu is a fast-moving disease that could cause a lot of damage in the months it would take to mount a vaccination campaign.' The US government's cancellation of its $766m contract with Moderna to research and develop an H5N1 vaccine also signals a concerning strategy from health officials, Nuzzo and Rasmussen said. Other restrictions on vaccine development, like a new plan to test all vaccines against saline placebos, is 'going to make it extremely difficult to approve any new vaccine' and would 'have a devastating impact on our ability to respond to a potential pandemic', Rasmussen said – especially in a rapidly moving pandemic where speed matters. 'You don't have time for that if this virus causes a human-to–human outbreak,' Rasmussen said. All of these policies mean the US is less prepared for a pandemic than it was in 2020, she said. And it also means there will be preventable suffering now, even before the next big one strikes. 'We are actively making people less safe, less healthy and more dead,' Rasmussen said.

Mass. Black therapists trying to diversify the workforce face an uphill battle
Mass. Black therapists trying to diversify the workforce face an uphill battle

Boston Globe

time10 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Mass. Black therapists trying to diversify the workforce face an uphill battle

Advertisement 'We took the good and left the bad, and helped create this,' Labissiere, one of the clinic's cofounders, said from the Hyde Park Avenue office. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Labissiere and Wynn are rarities in this grueling industry: Black clinicians who have stuck around and own their own practice. The Child and Family Wellness Center isone of just a few Black-owned behavioral health practices in Massachusetts. In interviews with the Globe, 10 Black mental health care providers, advocates, and public officials agreed several systemic barriers keep the workforce from diversifying. The deep-seated stigma of mental illness among Black people, the time and financial costs of finishing school, and the biases embedded in the field's license exams are roadblocks for diversifying the workforce, which already suffers from massive turnover and vacancy rates. Related : Advertisement The societal costs are immense. The experienced these symptoms at higher rates, said Gemima St. Louis, vice president for workforce initiatives and specialty training and clinical psychology professor at Williams James College in Newton. As the mental health crises that COVID-19 drew out persist, stakeholders worry the behavioral health workforce won't be able to meet this rising demand with culturally competent care. 'We have a workforce that is insufficient, a workforce that lacks the diversity that is represented in the communities that have the greatest needs for mental health services,' St. Louis said. Related : Advocates are introducing measures to tackle the representation gap at its root. Clinicians working in underserved communities can have some of their student debt covered through The people working to diversify the behavioral health workforce are chipping away at a profession that has historically been for white and affluent individuals. A 2023 Advertisement One in 10 respondents in behavioral health leadership roles identified as non-Hispanic Black. Black respondents made up 9 percent of the survey's independently licensed clinicians, meaning they don't need supervision to provide treatment. Only 7.6 percent of behavioral health physicians — professionals with medical degrees — were Black. The lack of representation within the sector doesn't match the range of people needing these services, advocates say. A separate survey of insured residents across Massachusetts found that one in 10 non-Hispanic Black residents reported poor mental health in 2021, along with 15 percent of Hispanic residents. One barrier driving these disparities precedes any roadblocks Black clinicians are facing in their field: mental health care's taboo nature in their community. Black people 'might have a little bit more wealth and more opportunities, but we've never really had a chance to really process our struggles in this country,' said Nieisha Deed, founder of Recruitment into the sector can be happenstance, instead of something instilled from an early age. Larry Higginbottom, CEO of The Osiris Group clinic in Roxbury, stumbled across 'the mental health field' during a chance conversation in the late '80s with Omar Reid, a local pioneer of Black psychology and mental health. Advertisement It was a foreign concept, but '[Reed] planted a seed,' Higginbottom, now 71, said. For Melanie Robinson Findlay, owner of Upwards 'N' Onwards, an independent therapy practice in Hyde Park, the death of a best friend during high school propelled her into social work. By the time she pursued a doctorate, she had 18 years of clinical social work experience, completed a clerkship, and was even appointed to the state's Board of Registration of Social Workers. But this didn't seem like enough. She noticed her peers would find supervisors with ease. Meanwhile, 'I always felt I had to prove myself.' 'What was I missing that they have?' Robinson Findlay said. 'And when you control for all the things, there's only one thing that pops out.' Learning about the craft is only the first hurdle to entering the industry. It costs hundreds for Mental health counselors, clinical social workers, psychologists, and other professionals within the field must complete thousands of hours to qualify for a license, some of which have to be under direct supervision from another practitioner. Labissiere said the onus for supervision is placed on the aspiring clinician; they must find someone who is willing to sign off on their application and in turn, lose an employee that keeps their own practice afloat. 'These are gatekeeper positions,' Labissiere said. 'If you don't have an organization ... pushing you to become licensed, we get stuck.' Advertisement Wynn worries this mentality might choke off the next generation of clinicians of color, which is already a small group. 'People look at it as competition, but there's more than enough clients in need,' Wynn said. 'It's not a competition. It's a collaboration.' While navigating the many stressors of entering the workforce, many aspiring social workers aren't taught the financial literacy needed to start and sustain independent practices, said Malaka Mims, president of the Greater Boston Association of Black Social Workers. So many social workers are focused on passing the exam, she said, that they often say, 'I don't know how to be a business owner.' 'Social workers are trained to help others, but the field must also prioritize self care and equip social workers to care for ourselves,' Mims said. For Robinson Findlay, of Upwards 'N' Onwards, running her own practice has been a longtime dream, but it comes with its own challenges. She has scaled her fees down to accommodate low-income clients, and says she is owed thousands in private insurance reimbursements. She makes up with consulting, lecturing, and a postdoctoral fellowship. Robinson Findlay can barely afford to do this, but she can't refuse a client's request. 'Even if I say no to one, that's too many.' This story was produced by the Globe's team, which covers the racial wealth gap in Greater Boston. You can sign up for the newsletter . Tiana Woodard can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store