Desai Miraj U, Paranamana Nadika, Dovidio John F, Davidson Larry, Stanhope Victoria
Program for Recovery and Community Health, Yale School of Medicine.
Yale University South Asian Studies Council.
Clin Psychol Sci. 2023 May;11(3):476-489. doi: 10.1177/21677026221133053. Epub 2022 Dec 22.
This article presents a study exploring structural biases within mental health organizations, in the context of person-centered care-an emerging framework for health systems globally. Findings revealed how surrounding institutional structures conditioned a powerful influence on clinical operations, in which there is a risk for clients to be systemically seen as a non-person, that is, as a racialized or bureaucratic object. Specifically, the article elucidates how racial profiles could become determinants of care within institutions; and how another, covert form of institutional objectification could emerge, in which clients became reduced to unseen bureaucratic objects. Findings illuminated a basic psychosocial process through which staff could become unwitting carriers of systemic agenda and intentionality-a type of "bureaucra-think"-and also how some providers pushed against this climate. These findings, and emergent novel concepts, add to the severely limited research on institutional bias and racism within psychological science.
本文呈现了一项研究,该研究在以患者为中心的护理背景下探索心理健康组织内部的结构性偏见,以患者为中心的护理是全球卫生系统中一个新兴的框架。研究结果揭示了周围的制度结构如何对临床操作产生强大影响,在这种情况下,客户有被系统性地视为非人的风险,也就是说,被视为种族化或官僚化的对象。具体而言,本文阐明了种族特征如何成为机构内护理的决定因素;以及另一种隐蔽的机构客观化形式是如何出现的,在这种形式中,客户沦为看不见的官僚对象。研究结果揭示了一个基本的社会心理过程,通过这个过程,工作人员可能不知不觉地成为系统性议程和意图的载体——一种“官僚思维”——以及一些提供者如何抵制这种氛围。这些发现以及新出现的概念,为心理学中关于机构偏见和种族主义的严重有限的研究增添了内容。