4.3 Article

Culture

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue 2, Pages 166-175

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jclp.20757

Keywords

psychotherapy outcomes; ethnic minority groups; culture; meta-analysis; evidence-based practice; treatment adaptation

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This article summarizes the definitions, means, and research of adapting psychotherapy to clients' cultural backgrounds. We begin by reviewing the prevailing definitions of cultural adaptation and providing a clinical example. We present an original meta-analysis of 65 experimental and quasi-experimental studies involving 8,620 participants. The omnibus effect size of d=.46 indicates that treatments specifically adapted for clients of color were moderately more effective with that clientele than traditional treatments. The most effective treatments tended to be those with greater numbers of cultural adaptations. Mental health services targeted to a specific cultural group were several times more effective than those provided to clients from a variety of cultural backgrounds. We recommend a series of research-supported therapeutic practices that account for clients' culture, with culture-specific treatments being more effective than generally culture-sensitive treatments. (C) 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol: In Session 67:166-175, 2011.

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