2007
DOI: 10.14713/pcsp.v3i3.905
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Considering Culture One Client at a Time: Maximizing the Cultural Exchange

Abstract: Cultural competency is a process that requires knowledge, diligence, and availability of resources. For the individual practitioner, it may be unfeasible to expect expert-level knowledge of any more than a few cultural groups. This commentary provides a general approach that clinicians can use to become oriented to a culture, make use of evidence-based frameworks, and treat the therapy as an ongoing cultural exchange. Using this approach a clinician may be able to flexibly adapt his or her individual case form… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…A critically reflective tension between these overlapping domains prevents the misinterpretation of a clinical issue as cultural when it is not or assuming an issue is personal and idiosyncratic when it is in fact cultural (Chu, 2007;Fields, 2010). At moments where cultural misunderstandings arise, it is imperative that the therapist disclose a lack of knowledge and invite the patient to provide corrective feedback.…”
Section: Clinical Considerations In Applying Relational Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A critically reflective tension between these overlapping domains prevents the misinterpretation of a clinical issue as cultural when it is not or assuming an issue is personal and idiosyncratic when it is in fact cultural (Chu, 2007;Fields, 2010). At moments where cultural misunderstandings arise, it is imperative that the therapist disclose a lack of knowledge and invite the patient to provide corrective feedback.…”
Section: Clinical Considerations In Applying Relational Interventionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, individual diversity within a specific cultural group is likely to be large, and culture-specific information will not be invariably applicable. It is more important that clinicians be aware of their own assumptions and engage in ongoing attempts to challenge them and test cultural hypotheses, in a process that has been called ''maximizing cultural exchange'' (Chu 2007;Fields 2010). The patient and family would be essential partners in this process, ensuring that not only culture, but also individual variations applicable to the specific patient and family are incorporated as much as possible into treatment.…”
Section: Clinical Significancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This case study presents methods by which cognitive-behavioral approaches were concretely and successfully modified to accommodate the ethnic and cultural specificities and complexities of the successful case of "TC," a mid-20s Chinese American male with Major Depressive Disorder and Generalized Anxiety Disorder. The broader implications of these specificities and complexities for general practice with such clients is well-discussed in two commentaries on the TC case by Chu (2007) and Hwang and Wood (2007). For example, Chu uses the case to illustrate the nature of cultural competence by placing it within "a general approach that clinicians can use to become oriented to a culture [with which they are not necessarily familiar], make use of evidence-based frameworks, and treat the therapy as an ongoing cultural exchange" (p. 34).…”
Section: Response To Knight and Hyer Commentariesmentioning
confidence: 99%