Abstract
African American men face challenges that include internalized negative social identities, marginalization, oppression, systemic racism, invisibility syndrome, targets of violence, murder, and erasure. Social workers may place the population at further risk of harm by using methods influenced solely by Eurocentric values. There is a paucity of peer-reviewed journal articles in the social work literature regarding the mental health of African American men. The literature fails to support social workers in acquiring the clinical skills required to provide services to African American men. This article will provide guidance to improve assessment, diagnosis, and clinician engagement with adult African American male clients. Barriers to the care of this population include the stigma of receiving mental health services, avoidance of vulnerability, medical distrust, clinician bias, no knowledge culturally expressed symptomology of mental illness, and an absence of culturally responsive care. Theories that inform the work with African American men in this article are the social determinants of health theory, intersectional theory, and narrative theory.
Published Version
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