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Youth mental health first aid training with diverse educators.

Ana-Sophia Ross, Cixin Wang, Jia Li Liu

2023Psychological Services13 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 1.9 years, 96% ethnic minorities): City Year AmeriCorps members who work in diverse low-income schools in Florida. We culturally adapted the program to better meet the needs of the participants and the students they serve as over 95% of the students they served were people of color. Quantitative survey data were collected at three time points (pre, post, and 3 months after the training) to examine whether YMHFA training better equipped classroom educators to support students' mental health. Overall, training was associated with improvements in mental health literacy, knowledge of school-based mental health providers, confidence, and intentions to engage in mental health first aid (MHFA) behaviors. Notably, educators reported greater engagement in mental health first aid behaviors at the 3-month follow-up than before training. No improvement in mental health stigma was observed. Some improvements (i.e., mental health literacy, intentions to help) were not sustained at the follow-up. Qualitative data generally supported quantitative findings and suggested that the YMHFA program with cultural consideration is suitable for this diverse sample of classroom educators. Educators' suggestions to improve the training to support culturally and linguistically diverse students' mental health are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

Mental healthMental health literacyPsychologyEthnic groupStigma (botany)Medical educationCultural competenceSample (material)MedicineMental illnessPsychiatryPedagogyChromatographyAnthropologyChemistrySociologySchool Health and Nursing EducationChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional DevelopmentHealth, psychology, and well-being
Youth mental health first aid training with diverse educators. | Litcius