This week’s Wellness Wednesday focuses on Hispanic/Latinx Mental Health. For the Hispanic/Latinx community, mental health and mental illnesses may be stigmatized topics that can result in suffering in silence. Additionally, the community faces unique institutional and systemic barriers that complicate access to services such as cultural misunderstandings, lack of information/services in Spanish (and other languages spoken in the community), or lack of access to insurance. Additionally, we must remember to consider how multiple identities interact that factor into the mental health of an individual (i.e. sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, education, etc.). Here are some facts:

 

  1. There is a perception in Latinx/Hispanic communities, especially among older people, that discussing problems with mental health can create embarrassment and shame for the family, resulting in fewer people seeking treatment.
  2. Bilingual patients are evaluated differently when evaluated in English versus Spanish, and Latinx/Hispanic people are more frequently undertreated than whites.
  3. 18% percent of Latinx/Hispanic people in the U.S. do not have health insurance, with those of Honduran and Guatemalan origin having the highest rates of being uninsured (35 percent and 33 percent respectively)

 

For more facts, information, and resources, you can see the links below.

 

Resources (not an exhaustive list):

 

By Gustavo Molinar, Mental Health Literacy Specialist