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Impact of Racial Microaggressions in Psychotherapy Vignettes With African American Clients: An Experimental Analogue Design.

Authors :
Rudecindo, Brendalisse
Imel, Zac E.
Kuo, Patty B.
Smith, William A.
Tao, Karen W.
Source :
Journal of Counseling Psychology. Jul2024, Vol. 71 Issue 4, p203-214. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Mental health researchers have focused on promoting culturally sensitive clinical care (Herman et al., 2007; Whaley & Davis, 2007), emphasizing the need to understand how biases may impact client well-being. Clients report that their therapists commit racial microaggressions—subtle, sometimes unintentional, racial slights—during treatment (Owen et al., 2014). Yet, existing studies often rely on retrospective evaluations of clients and cannot establish the causal impact of varying ambiguity of microaggressions on clients. This study uses an experimental analogue design to examine offensiveness, emotional reactions, and evaluations of the interaction across three distinct levels of microaggression statements: subtle, moderate, and overt. We recruited 158 adult African American participants and randomly assigned them to watch a brief counseling vignette. We found significant differences between the control and three microaggression statements on all outcome variables. We did not find significant differences between the microaggression conditions. This study, in conjunction with previous correlational research, highlights the detrimental impact of microaggressions within psychotherapy, regardless of racially explicit content. Public Significance Statement: African Americans tend to exhibit consistently negative reactions in response to therapist racial microaggressions, regardless of how racially explicit they are. These experimental findings can inform the culturally sensitive training of therapists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00220167
Volume :
71
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Counseling Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178145590
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/cou0000742