|
Joe R. Feagin, Kevin E. Early and
Karyn D.
McKinney
excerpted from: Joe R. Feagin, Kevin E. Early and
Karyn D. McKinney, The Many Costs of Discrimination: the Case of
Middle-class African Americans , 34 Indiana Law Review 1313-1360,
1334-1344 (2001)(186 Footnotes)
Long ago, in the 1960s the critic of racial colonialism, Frantz
Fanon, argued forcefully that colonization causes the colonized serious
psychological problems, because of the continual assaults it inflicts on
their personalities. Numerous studies have documented the harmful
effects of workplace stress on the health of employees of any racial
orethnic group. Although work is a primary source of stress for many
individuals, some research shows that certain types of job stress are
unique to the experiences of Americans of color, and may contribute to
their facing unique physical and mental health challenges. Certain
social conditions, including racial inequality, blocked opportunities,
and discrimination are major generators of pain and distress for
individuals. Physical and mental health problems can stem from the
stresses of discrimination. Recent research has highlighted the need to
take into account three dimensions in considerations of the role of
stress in the lives of African Americans. The first is the
individual-level interactions between race and health; the second,
interpersonal relationships and health; and the third, societal factors,
such as poverty and racism, that contribute detrimentally to African
American health. Research has found that African Americans are caught in
economic, social, and political conditions that are harmful to their
health. Mirowsky and Ross conclude that this pain and distress can take
two psychological forms: being depressed, being demoralized, and feeling
hopeless; and feeling anxiety, fear, and worry. Karasek and Theorell
have shown that variations in control and socio-emotional support at work
predict variations in psychological depression.
Demoralization, anxiety, and anger over everyday discrimination are
to be expected under the circumstances faced by African Americans in
U.S. society, but they are nonetheless unhealthy at the levels
experienced. A few recent research studies have touched on the
relationship of discrimination to mental health problems. In addition to
older studies of African Americans such as that of Grier and Cobbs,
three recent studies of Mexican Americans have found that experience
with discrimination is linked to higher levels of stress and
psychological suffering, including depression and lower levels of life
satisfaction. An analysis drawing on the National Study of Black
Americans has also suggested that recent experience with discrimination
may be associated with poor mental health.
Often a worker of color finds he or she is one of few, or even the
only person of that racial-ethnic background within their work
environment. This status often does not allow them the social support
that could help to alleviate workplace stress. Additionally, this
isolated status may draw an inordinate amount of attention to the
minority group member's job performance, and may cause a stigmatizing
"token" status to be ascribed. Thus, African Americans in
predominantly white work settings may feel pressure to prove that they
were not hired strictly because of affirmative action, as may often be
the assumption of their white colleagues. This pressure, coupled with
experiences with exclusion and other discrimination, may lead to stress
for African Americans as well as other Americans of color.
Although some research has been done on the mental health of African
Americans, the findings have been contradictory. Some studies point to
the resilience and coping skills of African Americans and conclude that
African Americans have much lower rates of mental illness than do
whites. Other studies findthat African American rates of mental illness
are higher than those of whites. Still other studies have found that
rates of mental illness for people of various racial-ethnic backgrounds
are moderated by demographic characteristics such as marital and
socioeconomic status. These contradictory findings have led some to
suggest that public health researchers abandon racial comparison
research altogether. Others have called for qualitative research, such
as ethnographic research and case studies, as well as longitudinal
studies that cover more time, in order to supplement contradictory
research findings. Still others have suggested that various societal
stereotypes regarding African Americans lead to bias in mental health
diagnoses, making any findings regarding the mental health of African
Americans dubious. Contradictions in quantitative research regarding the
mental health of people of color suggest that researchers should
consider that perceptions of people of color may play a primary role in
the diagnosis and treatment of those who are psychologically troubled.
Historically, the mental health treatment of African Americans has
been conducted on a foundation of stereotypical ideas about African
Americans. In the 1800s, some enslaved African Americans who either
disobeyed their masters or ran away were given specific diagnoses of
mental illness. During Reconstruction, mental health practitioners
asserted that the supposed increase in mental illness of African
Americans was due to the loss of the many civilizing
"benefits" of slavery. In the early 1900s, African Americans
were often characterized by whites as promiscuous, emotionally and
criminally volatile, childlike, and unintelligent. Psychiatric research
generally relied on these racist stereotypes in diagnosis, and
researchers even congratulated themselves on the "fortunate
guidance" of members of society through whom many African Americans
have been "saved" from physically and mentally ruining their
lives. Some mental health studies written between the late 1800s and the
mid 1900s even stated that African Americans lacked the psychological
complexity to become depressed, given their "inferior"
psyches. By the early 1960s, new research was beginning to turn to
cultural, rather than biological, explanations for racial differences in
mental health, and suggested that the more integrated African Americans
became, the more they would experience depression, often designated as
"the white man's malady."
Some current research suggests that African Americans are often
misdiagnosed by mental health professionals. Diagnostic tests may be
racially biased, elevating the observed rates of certain types of mental
illness for African Americans. Researchers have found that even when
African American and white individuals present the same symptoms to
doctors they are sometimes diagnosed with very different illnesses. For
example, with the same symptoms, whites are often diagnosed with
depression, which is treated with psychotherapy and has a good
prognosis, while African Americans tend to be diagnosed as having
schizophrenia, which is more serious and must be treated with
medication. A study of 100 white and 100 African American women, matched
by age, who had visited an outpatient family practice center from 1993
to 1994, explored the rate of primary or secondary diagnoses of
emotional disorder for the two groups. The research findings showed that
forty-four percent of the white women, compared to twenty-four percent
of the African American women, had either a primary or secondary
diagnosis of psychiatric disorder. The researchers suggested that this
racial discrepancy was based on evidence that black women actually have
less psychiatric disorder, perhaps due to either better family and
community support network or a greater reluctance to discuss personal
problems with physicians.
A white standard of normality is usually taught to and used by white
therapists. However, cultural norms for what constitutes
"normal" or "abnormal" behavior may be different for
African Americans than for whites. Specifically, African Americans may
have different ways of expressing symptoms and complaints, different
culturally normative behaviors, and different coping mechanisms than do
whites. Recent research has suggested that as therapists become more
aware of mental health issues unique to people of color, they may need
to retrospectively diagnose African American patients to correct earlier
misdiagnoses.
White therapists may harbor negative views of African American
patients, based on societal myths. They may communicate these feelings
in their nonverbal behavior, causing African American patients to
withhold the kind of self-disclosure that is necessary for
psychotherapy. Researchers have found that for African Americans,
psychotherapy with a white caregiver often leads to "unhealthful
consequences." Many call for better cross-cultural training for
psychiatrists and psychotherapists.
Because of racial bias in the mental health care profession, African
Americans have generally relied on other forms of help for psychological
difficulties. Research has been done on the differences in help-seeking
behaviors of whites and African Americans. Early bias in mental health
care led African Americans to care for their mentally ill family members
at home. Today, older African Americans in need of psychological support
are often more likely to seek help from family and extended family
members than from mental health professionals. Findings also suggest
that African Americans are likely to see both physical and mental health
as dependent on a healthy spiritual life. Thus, they often rely on
prayer, ministers, and church services for psychological help. Some have
noted that African American church services are similar to group therapy
in offering psychological relief. This might account for the fact that
group therapy seems to be more useful than individual psychotherapy, at
least for African American women.
Whatever the actual differences inAfrican American and white mental
illness and treatment, one observation made by many researchers is that
given the amount of societal stress in the lives of African Americans,
one would expect them to exhibit much higher rates of mental illness
than they do. Some suggest that due to their life circumstances, African
Americans may be more tolerant in coping with symptoms of stress. Thus,
researchers have been urged to explore the resilience and coping skills
that African Americans utilize to protect their mental health from
racist attacks. To this end, a few researchers have suggested using a
stress/adaptation paradigm in mental health research, which emphasizes
environmental as well as personality factors in seeking the cause for
African Americans' emotional problems and focuses on their unique coping
skills. Some have also stressed the need for life-course research, which
would offer a perspective on the strengths and structural barriers in
mental and physical health care for African Americans at all stages of
life.
Our focus group participants reported various psychological
complaints they believed to be the result of workplace discrimination,
ranging from extreme anxiety and added stress to depression severe
enough to require medication or hospitalization. An administrative
assistant was hospitalized for depression after she was almost laid off:
I had been in . . . my department for eleven years when I, we had a
major change in staff. We had gone from a white male boss who had just
left, and a white female who had taken over in the position. I had
seniority in the office as far as time and had just received a
promotion in the job, and had nothing but excellent, excellent
performance evaluations. But when it came time to do the budget cuts,
my position was offered as being ten percent cut. I was told that
there was no way to avoid this position being cut. Being that at this
time I was the only minority that was, that was in the office, it was
devastating to me at the time because we tried to work it out. Now I'm
working for an agency that advertises . . . strong affirmative action
and equal employment opportunities. So I had a right to file [a]
discrimination [complaint].
She then described the resolution, which involved a black elected
official interceding for her:
Because I was looking at a layoff. . . . [He] basically went in and
told this supervisor that, "With all these vacant positions that
we have in this county, you will find her a job." I was told on a
Friday by the department they wanted to transfer me to, that I had to
make a decisions over the weekend and let them know by that following
Monday whether I was going to accept this job, which was a [big] cut
in pay . . . or go in the unemployment line. I had to help take care
of two children, so I chose to go for the transfer. But . . .through
all this, and, the mental anguish that I went through, I was
hospitalized for nine days. It was just devastating, because I saw it
as blatant discrimination. . . . There was nothing they could go to in
the file and find in terms of not performing or anything like that.
And then the amount of time, get basically kicked out the door is what
happened. . . . But then, but not only the financial burden, but just
the toll that it took. . . . I think the toll was so hurtful because I
saw it strictly as racial.
It appears that much racially linked mistreatment in work settings is
disguised by the perpetrators in bureaucratic terms, as here in a budget
cut. This woman's judgment of discrimination is not arbitrary but comes
from past experience as the "only minority" in an almost
exclusively white department. Her ability to read the situation may also
be grounded in past experience in a variety of settings. In such cases
significant achievements are ignored and serious mental and physical
pain can result.
A teacher described a situation in which her boss moved her to a
different position just before school started. This woman discovered
later that she was moved in order to make room for a new and less
experienced white teacher. She described the stress she underwent as a
result of having to change so quickly:
I was so upset I didn't know what to do. Just totally wiped out.
I'm thinking about all of this stuff I've got to move. She promised
that the janitors would help me move. Nobody helped me. People were
almost in tears watching me move all of this stuff in a shopping cart.
. . . And, it took me, that means I had to organize my stuff, move it,
and get ready for another grade level and be ready to teach. . . . So
I did my pre-planning; it almost killed me. . . . Nobody came to help
me, but everybody was giving me sympathy. I had to go to the doctor. .
. . and I had become hypertensive. But I felt myself, I could hardly
work, I was so upset. And I had gotten prayer, and, was reading my
scripture, and meditating . . . .
When the moderator asked her if she had been hospitalized for
hypertension, the woman answered:
No, he put me on an antidepressant . . . in addition to the
medication I needed to take-I'm glad you made me clarify that, helped
me to clarify it, brother. I had to go on an antidepressant. I didn't
take it very long, but that's how upset I was, had to see a physician.
I was under his care for awhile. But, I mean, they brought these three
white women on. . . . That's what irks me, when I hear about the white
people attacking affirmative action, when it's worked in reverse, and
it's still happening-to them. They're, nobody hears about how they get
hired, and they're less qualified than we are. Nobody hears about how
many times we're hired with extra qualifications, more than qualified,
to do the same job that they're hired to do.
Thinking along similar lines, an engineer spoke of a black coworker's
experience of depression. His view, shared by other respondents, is that
African Americans are reluctant to seek assistance with psychological
pain:
But it's kind of more, against black culture to go for any type of
psychological . . . testing, or, I had one friend who actually went to
a depressive state . . . because he was the type of person who just
tried to do the best he could at everything. And sometimes you just
can't do that, or do everything. So in this particular case, he went
to the point where his body just collapsed, mentally. Where some
people's bodies can collapse physically, his collapsed mentally. I
personally didn't experience that, but I saw the pain that he went
through. And likewise he's having racial type things at his job, where
his counterparts would get promoted at a certain level, where he would
stay on a level below, after years. And he was as qualified-sometimes
they get you in a position to think that you're not as qualified as
the next person, where in reality you may be more qualified than the
person that got promoted over you. But a promotion doesn't necessarily
mean that this person does higher quality work. It means, sometimes
that person knows how to network with the boss better than you do.
Again the suffering of one black person is communicated to and felt
by others in a social network. Research shows that most African
Americans rely on informal social networks for emotional support, thus
the concerns of one individual are often known in great detail by a
larger support network. After this comment, a woman in this man's group
added that black employees have less time to network with the boss
because they are working extra to prove themselves as capable. The
engineer agreed with her statement, then continued:
And if you're working, you can't network with the boss, and drink
coffee with him, and tell him what kind of work and stuff that you're
doing. Because you're actually out there in the trenches going to
work. So it was not my personal case, but his particular case, he
might have gone to a stage where he had such depression he had to
actually take medication.
This idea about black qualifications is a theme that one finds in
other accounts by African Americans of discrimination in the workplace,
yet it receives little public or media attention. From the black middle
class perspective, it is often the less qualified whites who get special
privileges over better qualified people of color. This recurring white
advantage can create much psychological pain, including depression, for
its black victims. Of additional importance is the networking theme
suggested in previous comments. In the United States economy many racial
barriers are linked, directly or indirectly, to white
"good-ole-boy" networks, which are commonly at the core of
workplaces and even of large business sectors. In these networks whites
commonly exclude outsiders from critical information flows |