“…Social problems such as racism, discrimination, patriarchy, homophobia, and poverty currently affect all human experiences, yet these can become lost in the use of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th edition, text revision; DSM-IV-TR; American Psychiatric Association, 2000) that focuses on disorders being rooted in the individual. The clear absence in the DSM-IV-TR of culture-specific or culture-bound syndromes related to macro-level issues, such as acculturation adjustments, migration and immigration trauma, ethnic-racial identity confusion, or post-traumatic stress disorder caused by socially sanctioned racism or violence (Velásquez, Johnson, & Brown-Cheatham, 1993) can reduce these experiences to invisibility when the APMHN adheres only to the DSM-IV-TR system of assessment. Without consciousness, nurses may operate in a culturally incompetent manner and facilitate clients' conceptualizing their problems solely from an individual disorder perspective, rather than a more macro-cultural perspective that would take into account cultural diversity and the issues surrounding marginalized groups.…”