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Ep 196 | Susan Chung: Talks About her Career in Mental Health and BIPOC Mental Health Month
Description
A note from Talking Taiwan host Felicia Lin:
July is BIPOC (Black Indigenous People of Color) Mental Health Month, which is also known as Bebe Moore Campbell National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month, named for the mental health advocate who brought awareness to the unique struggles that underrepresented groups face in regard to mental illness in the US.
I've invited Susan Chung on to Talking Taiwan to talk about her career in mental health, and BIPOC Mental Health Month. Susan is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, who provides psychotherapy specifically to BIPOC students. We also spoke about key statistics and research findings that inform us about the mental health of Asians, some of the unique challenges facing BIPOC communities and individuals, the racism that Susan has experienced as a mental health professional, and the importance of managing our own mental health.
This episode of Talking Taiwan has been sponsored by NATWA, the North America Taiwanese Women's Association.
NATWA was founded in 1988, and its mission is:
- to evoke a sense of self-esteem and enhance women's dignity,
- to oppose gender discrimination and promote gender equality,
- to fully develop women's potential and encourage their participation in public affairs,
- to contribute to the advancement of human rights and democratic development in Taiwan,
- to reach out and work with women's organizations worldwide to promote peace for all.
To learn more about NATWA visit their website: www.natwa.com
Here's a little preview of what we talked about in this podcast episode:
- How Susan got interested in studying mental health and social work
- How Susan realized that there's a need to have more Asians represented in mental health
- Susan's work with forensic social work and how it is different from social work
- Susan's work with survivors of human trafficking
- Susan's career path
- Susan has worked with middle school-aged kids in addition to college kids
- How Susan manages the impact that dealing with victims of human trafficking could have on her own mental health
- How Susan continues to do forensic social work since moving from New York to North Carolina by accompanying police on raids
- How Susan felt about being the only Asian-identifying therapist among Black-identifying therapists at the University of North Carolina counseling center
- Work-related trauma that Susan has experienced
- Susan's work experience at the University of North Carolina
- Susan's experiences living in Irvine, California, New York City and North Carolina
- In 2017, according to the Office of Minority Health, the leading cause of death in young Asian Americans in the US was suicide. Citation: Matsuoka, J. K., Breaux, C., & Ryujin, D. H. (1997). National utilization of mental health services by Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders. Journal of Community Psychology, 25(2), 141-145. doi:10.1002/(sici)1520-6629(199703)25:23.0.co;2-0
- Susan's research at University of California, Irvine about the higher rate of depression and suicidal thoughts amongst Asian-identifying students
- The rates of reported and diagnosed mental illness are low for Asian Americans compared to Euro-Americans, averaging between 5-12% Citation: https://minorityhealth.hhs.gov/omh/browse.aspx?lvl=4&lvlid=54
- According to the nonprofit organization Mental Health America, Asian Americans are the least likely racial group in the United States to seek mental health services
- Susan's work in the children's psychiatric department of a hospital and how