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Cultural competence in clinical psychology training: A qualitative investigation of student and academic experiences

journal contribution
posted on 2019-05-31, 00:00 authored by LRC Geerlings, Claire Thompson, R Bouma, R Hawkins
The Australian Psychological Society Objective: Recent years have seen a marked increase in attention to cultural competence in clinical psychology practice in Australia. While the body of literature on the need for cultural competence is expanding, this is the first study that analyses how cross-cultural training and practice is experienced and related to standardised models of cultural competence. Method: Twelve participants (8 students and 4 academics; 9 females and 3 males, ages 22–57) in two Australian universities were interviewed on their experiences with cultural competence during clinical psychology training. Each semi-structured interview took about 30 min and focused on identifying the training experiences and needs for cultural competence. Results: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of the transcripts delivered three master themes: experiences of culture, strategies for culturally competent practice, and experiences of cultural competence development. Conclusions: Students and academics experienced a “western” bias in training, and consequently adopted a variety of strategies to adapt their practice with culturally non-western clients. These findings draw attention to the need for structured cultural competence development in professional training programs. © 2017

History

Volume

53

Issue

2

Start Page

161

End Page

170

Number of Pages

10

eISSN

1742-9544

ISSN

0005-0067

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons, UK

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2017-04-07

External Author Affiliations

University of Queensland; James Cook University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Australian Psychologist