Modifying Conventional Psychiatric Practice to Serve Indigenous People
L. Mehl-Madrona, B. Mainguy

TL;DR
This paper explores how modifying psychiatric practices to include Indigenous cultural values and storytelling can improve mental health outcomes for Indigenous communities.
Contribution
The paper introduces a culturally adapted psychiatric approach using narrative methods to better serve Indigenous populations.
Findings
A life story interview approach engages Indigenous clients and improves therapy outcomes.
Reframing addiction through cultural narratives helps clients redefine their self-stories and goals.
The approach emphasizes client-defined recovery and aligns with Indigenous relational and spiritual values.
Abstract
Psychiatry has historically underserved Indigenous people. Earlier, cross-cultural psychiatry assumed that psychiatric disorders were universal and varied little across cultures. We must acknowledge their different views of mind and mental health. In our auto-ethnographic approach, we introduce or re-introduce participants to cultural beliefs, values, and methods for treating addictions, including narrative methods (storytelling), which receive greater acceptance by indigenous and marginalized peoples. Indigenous philosophy states that we see the world using the stories we have absorbed or constructed to explain our perceptions. Using substances is a story that is connected to poverty and adverse childhood events. We create new stories to develop a sense of agency, that one’s actions can make a difference in one’s life. We present our experiences and findings from providing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResilience and Mental Health · Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights · Cultural Competency in Health Care
