COVID-19 大流行对黑人社会工作者的心理影响

IF 0.8 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED Journal of Humanistic Counseling Pub Date : 2024-06-11 DOI:10.1002/johc.12227
Daniel G. Collins, Alea R. Holman, Tina S. Hsu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这项定性研究调查了 COVID-19 和反黑人暴力的双重流行对面向客户的黑人社会工作者的心理影响、他们在应对流行病时使用的应对策略,以及这些人的种族和文化身份是如何影响他们的经历的。这些人面临着创伤性压力和职业倦怠的独特风险。双重大流行病的创伤性质以及它们迫使人们面对亚洛姆提出的人类存在的基本要素:死亡、孤立、无意义以及自由和责任,加剧了这种风险。研究人员针对研究问题制定了一份包含 19 个项目的半结构化协议,对八名居住在美国、自称为黑人的服务对象社会工作者进行了访谈。研究人员采用布劳恩和克拉克的主题分析方法对数据进行了分析。共构建了五个主题:(1) COVID-19 带来的治疗变化,(2) 大流行带来的情感伤害,(3) 与黑人身份相关的经历,(4) 有利的经历,以及 (5) 应对 COVID-19 和持续的种族主义。参与者的经历表明了他们作为社会工作者、美国黑人和大流行病幸存者所面临的复杂的心理风险因素,以及他们应对生存问题的方式。参与者从他们的经历中创造了新的意义,并暗示了他们成功的创伤后成长,从而展示了他们的复原力。这项研究表明,有必要在社会工作实践和政策方面为黑人社会工作者提供更多支持,以减轻他们因大流行病而面临的复合压力。
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The psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Black social workers

This qualitative study investigated the psychological impact of the dual pandemics of COVID-19 and anti-Black violence on client-facing social workers who identify as Black, the coping strategies they used in response to the pandemic, and the ways in which these individuals’ racial and cultural identities impacted their experiences. Such individuals are at unique risk for traumatic stress and burnout. This risk was compounded by the traumatic nature of the dual pandemics and the ways in which they forced confrontation with Yalom's existential givens of human existence: death, isolation, meaninglessness, and freedom and responsibility. Eight client-facing social workers who identified as Black and lived in the United States were interviewed using a 19-item semistructured protocol created by the researchers that addressed the research questions. Data were analyzed using Braun and Clarke's thematic analysis methodology. Five themes were constructed: (1) Changes in treatment due to COVID-19, (2) Emotional toll due to the pandemic, (3) Experiences related to being Black, (4) Beneficial experiences, and (5) Coping with COVID-19 and ongoing racism. Participants’ experiences demonstrated the compounded psychological risk factors they faced as social workers, Black Americans, and survivors of the pandemic, and the ways in which they confronted existential concerns. Participants demonstrated resilience by making new meanings out of their experiences and implied their successful posttraumatic growth. This study demonstrated the need for greater support of Black social workers in social work practice and policy to ease the compounded stressors they face as a result of the pandemic.

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来源期刊
Journal of Humanistic Counseling
Journal of Humanistic Counseling PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
22.20%
发文量
30
期刊介绍: The Journal of Humanistic Counseling (JHC) explores humanistic counseling and development and research and critical reviews emphasize innovative programs and practices to promote tolerance, nurture diversity, and uphold human rights.
期刊最新文献
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