Navigating Barriers to Antiracist Supervision Within the Veterans Affairs Health Care System: Reflections on 2020 and a Call to Action

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic, the murder of George Floyd as well as other Black Americans, waves of violence against Asian American communities, and the 2020 presidential election created a national climate in the United States that almost defies description with regard to historical significance,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological services 2023-05, Vol.20 (2), p.283-290
Hauptverfasser: McDonald, James E., Bohlig, Amanda J., Engle, Jessica L.
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description In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic, the murder of George Floyd as well as other Black Americans, waves of violence against Asian American communities, and the 2020 presidential election created a national climate in the United States that almost defies description with regard to historical significance, collective emotional pain, and the urgency of the resulting calls for justice-focused action. This article explores the experience of three White psychologists/psychologists-in-training within this national context, and specifically, the impact on psychology training and supervision in the wake of the Executive Order on Combatting Race and Sex Stereotyping released in September 2020. Consistent with the extant literature in our field, we understand supervision to be an essential space for in-depth attention to trainee development around cultural humility and critical consciousness wherein we as supervisors also grow and deepen our own practice (Falender et al., 2013; Hook et al., 2016). As we navigated 2020, we found several key supervision processes particularly salient, including antiracism in supervision as mindful practice, facilitating learning while doing our own learning, supervisor consultation, and recognizing the impact of privilege on these processes. Impact Statement Clinical supervisors in federal service face barriers to antiracist practice, including the Hatch Act and the 2020 Executive Order. We assert that psychologists need to be prepared to work through these barriers and that supervision provides a fertile ground for the exploration and identification of ways that systems and practices can become more equitable and inclusive. We provide a combination of reflections, suggestions, and a call to action grounded in examples.
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subjects African Americans
Antiracism
Asian Americans
COVID-19
Delivery of Health Care
Executive orders
Health care
Health Care Administration
Human
Humans
Humility
Learning
Management Personnel
Military Veterans
Murders & murder attempts
Pandemics
Policy Making
Presidential elections
Psychologists
Psychology
Race
Reflectiveness
Stereotypes
Supervision
Supervisors
United States
Urgency
Veterans
Violence
title Navigating Barriers to Antiracist Supervision Within the Veterans Affairs Health Care System: Reflections on 2020 and a Call to Action
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