Black women's mental health faces unique challenges due to intersectional barriers and systemic inequalities, but culturally sensitive therapeutic support through licensed counselors can provide effective treatment while addressing specific needs related to gendered racism, stigma, and healthcare disparities.
When society tells you to 'be strong' while carrying the weight of multiple worlds on your shoulders, it's vital to recognize that seeking support isn't weakness—it's wisdom. Black women's mental health deserves focused attention and understanding, as you navigate unique challenges that impact your wellbeing. Let's explore the barriers you may face and, more importantly, the empowering strategies for finding culturally sensitive care that truly sees you.
Supporting Black Women’s Mental Health: Exploring Challenges
Mental health is essential to everyday life, regardless of who you are. The state of your mind affects how you think, feel, handle stress, treat others, behave, and communicate. However, Black women may face unique challenges when navigating mental healthcare.
Many Black women learn from family, community, and society that reaching out for help is not an option, despite the cost to their mental well-being. However, finding adequate mental health support that is culturally, racially, and socially applicable can offer many benefits. By addressing the inequalities and disparities in the mental healthcare system, society can continue creating a more inclusive environment where Black women can more easily obtain care.
Black women and intersectionality
For Black women, the intersectionality of being a woman and a person of color can create unique mental health obstacles. Specifically, they may face what is known as gendered racism. Many Black women face discrimination as a person of color and as a woman, and these two identities may combine to cause further discrimination. This intersectionality makes Black American women particularly vulnerable to social marginalization.
The intersectionality of being a Black woman can be unique because these two identities are often associated with negative associations of implicit bias in any situation, whether at school, at work, or in public. Women in this community may face challenges daily without proper support or guidance from people in their lives.
Black women face unique challenges in their careers, educational pursuits, and everyday lives. Gender bias and racial discrimination are common in the workplace, especially when Black women strive to advance to higher positions alongside white women and men. Equal pay and treatment are often hard to achieve. Research indicates that, in education and professional life, Black women are often confronted with hostile work environments, unsupportive mentors, and unequal playing fields. In everyday life, African American women experience racism on the macro and micro levels, healthcare inequalities, poverty, lack of resources, sexism, and other systems of inequality.
Black women and mental health
The statistics and research about Black women’s mental health can feel disheartening. For Black women, mental health struggles are common — when they do occur, they may be more persistent. Around 16% of Black people report having a mental illness, and 22.4% of those cases are considered severe. Black adults are also less likely than white adults to report experiencing symptoms like emotional distress, hopelessness, and sadness that persist over time, even if they are experiencing them.
Research on Black women and depression shows that poverty often plays a significant role in developing symptoms. Depression can incite a lack of motivation, which may worsen the impacts of poverty. As a result, anxiety may develop. Receiving a diagnosis may not be available for many Black women due to a lack of beneficial and culturally sensitive care in their community or locale. Instead, they may be misdiagnosed or not diagnosed at all.
Disparities in mental healthcare for Black women
Although African American women experience mental illness, they often don’t seek help. White populations seek help more often because they often have greater resources and experience less stigma. Among Black adults, one in three gets the mental health care they need. When they do get care, it may not be high quality. Misdiagnoses are common, and many Black women experience discrimination or difficulty finding a provider that understands their experiences and unique needs.
Various factors, including systemic inequalities in the healthcare system, a history of maltreatment toward Black people in healthcare, and institutional racism, can explain these health disparities. In addition, African American women face poverty at a higher rate, often lack the resources they need, and receive less education about mental health. However, stigma remains the most significant barrier Black women face in seeking mental healthcare.
Supporting Black women’s mental health
Many Black women advocate for the inequalities in the healthcare system to be addressed to receive the care they need and deserve. Mental healthcare providers and primary care providers often need more representation so that women of color can feel seen, heard, and understood. Providers may also benefit from more education regarding the needs of Black women and people of color in general.
It can also be beneficial to take steps to reduce the stigma surrounding Black women’s mental health. Awareness months are commemorated yearly for Black communities, including Black History Month. Many hesitate to seek help because of the fear of judgment from friends and families. Some may also judge themselves for seeking support or believe they should be able to get better on their own. Research shows that many Black individuals end up masking their symptoms of mental illness instead of seeking help for them. This action may leave them coping on their own and can exacerbate symptoms over time.
Overall, Black women face everyday societal inequalities that put them at a disadvantage. Other factors that can be addressed are systemic racism, poverty, and lack of awareness about mental health. Remedying these disparities in the system can ensure Black women receive the support they require.
How to care for your mental health as a Black woman
Black women are often subject to racism, discrimination, and microaggressions regularly. Each of these instances can build upon the others and become exhausting and overwhelming, especially for Black women’s mental health. Below are some strategies to cope with women’s mental health issues.
