A new report sheds light on barriers Asian Americans (AA), Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders (NHPI) face when seeking mental health care in California.
Roughly a quarter of AA and NHPI respondents said they experienced difficulty in accessing mental health services. Those difficulties were most pronounced for residents of Southeast Asian origin, with 37% reporting hardship in accessing mental health care.
Among AA and NHPI participants, nearly 70% cited “not knowing options” as the reason they had difficulty in getting mental health treatment.
“This report really is a plea to our institutions and our government that our communities are hurting, dying and enough is enough,” said Nkauj lab Yang, Executive Director for the California Commission on Asian and Pacific Islander American Affairs.
The report, done in collaboration with the group AAPI Data, builds on findings from UCLA’s 2021 California Health Interview Survey and roughly 1,600 follow-on surveys conducted last year.
Mental Health Resources for AAPI Community
“Even More Fragile”
Dr. Michi Fu, a licensed psychologist practicing in Monterey Park, said she and her coworkers had an outreach booth set up for the Lunar New Year Festival in front of the Star Dance Studio. They had to go back the morning after the deadly mass shooting to retrieve their company’s belongings since the festival was canceled.
“The mental health of our communities was already under attack and now it’s even more fragile,” Fu told LAist.
Fu said the tragic impact of the recent mass shootings in California is that now there is a sense of safety being compromised from within her own community. “That these violent attacks really can happen anywhere and be inflicted by anyone,” she said.
According to the…
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