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Press
Release
More
about the Cultural Adaptation Initiative...
July
6, 2006
Hogg
Foundation for Mental Health Awards $2.9 Million to Promote Effective
Mental Health Treatment for People of Color
AUSTIN-The Hogg
Foundation for Mental Health has awarded more than $2.9 million
over three years to Texas mental health providers in its three-year
initiative, "Cultural Adaptation: Providing Evidence-Based Practices
to People of Color."
The five organizations
funded through the initiative will adapt the delivery of evidence-based
practices (EBPs), such as cognitive-behavioral therapy, to be compatible
with the culture of the populations of color served.
"Texas is now
a majority-minority state, and our diversity continues to grow,"
said King E. Davis, Ph.D., Executive Director of the Hogg Foundation
for Mental Health. "We know that people of color everywhere are
less likely to receive the mental health services they need, and
the treatment they do receive is often ineffective. Culturally adapted
EBPs hold the potential to improve the delivery of mental health
care for Texans of color."
For the Cultural
Adaptation initiative, the Foundation selected mental health provider
organizations with a demonstrated ability to provide culturally
competent care to people of color. Over a three-year period, the
grantees will build upon their cultural competence skills by adopting
and modifying an EBP to match the cultures of their service populations.
EBPs are psychological treatments that have significant research
support.
The Cultural
Adaptation Initiative grantees will focus in the initiative's first
year on developing proficiency in the EBP they selected. Once trained
in the treatment through a "train the trainer" model, clinicians
will begin providing the EBP to the target populations of color.
By the second year of the initiative, grantees will have implemented
a cultural adaptation of the EBP. Adaptations will involve modifications
in the organization's provision of services, changes in the clinicians'
approach to their relationship with clients, or alterations to the
EBP itself. An independent evaluator will use program evaluation
results throughout the adaptation process to provide feedback to
the Foundation and grantees on the impact of their efforts.
"The mental
health field has long taken a 'one size fits all' stance, assuming
that treatments that work for one ethnic/racial group will benefit
all groups," said Davis. "Although we do have evidence that cognitive-behavioral
therapy and other EBPs can help people of color, the treatments
must be tailored to reflect the unique cultural experiences of diverse
groups. This grant program will teach us how to shape evidence-based
treatments for diverse cultures."
The Hogg Foundation
selected the grantee organizations through a competitive review
process in which Foundation staff evaluated applicants' proposals
for adapting an EBP for their service populations of color.
Lena Pope
Home, Inc., in Forth Worth received a grant of $536,695 over
three years to adapt the Defiant Child model for treating children
with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and oppositional defiant
disorder. The organization will culturally adapt the model for African
American children.
Based in Edinburg,
Tropical Texas Center for Mental Health and Mental Retardation
received a grant of $526,855 over three years to modify the delivery
of behavior and exposure therapies for the treatment of anxiety
disorders in Latino children and adults.
A grant of $384,441
over three years was awarded to Family Service of El Paso
to adapt the provision of cognitive-behavioral therapy for depression
in adults to fit the culture of its Latino service population.
DePelchin
Children's Center in Houston received a grant of $919,515 over
three years to modify their delivery of trauma-focused cognitive-behavioral
therapy to reflect the culture of Latino children and their parents.
Located in Houston,
Community Family Centers (Centros Familiares de la Comunidad)
was awarded $607,107 to culturally adapt cognitive-behavioral therapy
for Latino adolescents diagnosed with depressive disorders.
"These grantees
will provide strong leadership to the Texas mental health community,
demonstrating how providers can obtain superior outcomes with their
populations of color by culturally adapting EBPs," said Davis.
The Hogg Foundation
for Mental Health is an administrative unit of The University of
Texas at Austin. For over 65 years, the Hogg Foundation has accomplished
its mandate through grantmaking to mental health services, research,
policy, and public education projects in the state of Texas. The
Foundation also fulfills its benefactors' intent by operating its
own programs including mental health services research, public
policy analysis, public education, conferences on timely issues,
and the Regional Foundation Library to the benefit and enrichment
of organizations and communities statewide. More information is
available at www.hogg.utexas.edu.
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Media Contact:
Laurie Alexander
laurie.alexander@mail.utexas.edu
512-471-5041
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