The barriers to Black West Virginians getting the mental health care they may need


Illustration by Kelsey Dowling for BLACK BY GOD: The West Virginian

By Haadiza Ogwude | Reprinted from March 21, 2022 BLACK BY GOD: The West Virginian

Mental health is defined as an individual’s emotional, psychological, or social well-being. Mental health impacts every stage of life, from childhood and adolescence through adulthood. According to the National Alliance on Mental Health (NAMI), approximately 21% of U.S. adults experienced mental illness; 5.6% of U.S. adults experienced severe mental illness; and 6.7% of U.S. adults experienced a co-occurring substance use disorder and mental illness in 2020. Additionally, 16.5% of U.S. youth aged 6-17 experienced a mental health disorder in 2016.

The African American community, in particular, suffers from an increased rate of mental health concerns, including anxiety and depression. The department of psychiatry at Columbia University, reported that African Americans are 20% more likely to experience serious mental health problems, such as Major Depressive Disorder or Generalized Anxiety Disorder. Additionally, young Black adults (ages 18-25) also experience higher rates of mental health problems and lower mental health resource utilization rates than young white adults and older Black adults.

Some barriers that impact mental health for Black West Virginians include a scarcity of Black mental health professionals and mental health resources, stigma, lack of proper mental health education, poverty, racism, substance abuse, and incarceration.

Data also indicates that West Virginia consistently rates among states with the highest percentage of people experiencing mental health problems, including depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, and bipolar disorder. In a ranking of America’s healthiest communities by U.S. News and World Report, West Virginia was reported as having one of the nation’s highest rates of deaths of despair which include fatalities attributed to suicide, drug overdoses, and alcohol-related disease.

In the healthiest communities ranking, counties received a mental health score. The average score among West Virginia counties was approximately 28 out of 100. The five lowest-scoring counties for mental health were all in West Virginia.



Like many Black communities in the United States, West Virginia’s poor mental health stems from a complex mix of problems, including high poverty rates and substance abuse and a culture of independence that stigmatizes psychological help. Due to this troubling data, many Black mental health professionals in West Virginia believe that Black West Virginians are at a significant disadvantage when dealing with mental health issues than their white counterparts or even Black counterparts from other states.

“I would generally say that Appalachians are at a unique disadvantage. And then under that, African Americans would be a little bit more disadvantaged. Number one, because for some of them, there’s still a stigma attached to seeking out mental health, the availability of affordable mental health, anything to deal with them getting there, and working around a work schedule, a family schedule, all those things,” says Maureen Dillard, school counselor at West Virginia Schools of Diversion and Transitions.

The stigma surrounding therapy, drug use, and incarceration often prevent many people from getting the mental and physical health services they need.

Some barriers that impact mental health for Black West Virginians include a scarcity of Black mental health professionals and mental health resources, stigma, lack of proper mental health education, poverty, racism, substance abuse, and incarceration.

William Berkeley, the owner of Recovery U, a Black-owned, male-only substance abuse treatment center, says that substance abuse disorders and mental illnesses are co-occurring issues for many clients. However, the stigma surrounding therapy, drug use, and incarceration often prevent many people from getting the mental and physical health services they need. For African Americans, it’s even more difficult because those who have been convicted of drug-related crimes don’t have the same opportunities to receive treatment as their white counterparts.

“I think a lot of people with mental illness don’t get diagnosed, and they don’t even know they have mental illness or don’t care they got mental illness. Then, they go to substances to offset that mental illness. It makes them feel better, or they don’t have the capacity not to use these substances in some kind of way… I think the judicial system is a little bit at fault, in that I think Blacks don’t get the same opportunities to come to treatment, as much as the white criminal defendants might get to come to treatment,” Berkeley says.



Despite the prevalence of substance abuse in West Virginia, the lack of Black mental health professionals, resources, and mental health education seems to be the biggest concern for Gina Ogwude, Owner and CEO of West Virginia Family Support & Rehabilitation.

“I think West Virginians, in general, are at a disadvantage because of lack of resources, lack of professionals in the area… It’s hard for West Virginia to even attract professionals, and then you break it down into minority professionals. That’s even twice as hard because, first of all, minorities, especially Black Americans, make up such a small percentage of the population, to begin with. Then, to find maybe a very small percentage, of an already small percentage, that went to college to be able to provide mental health services. That’s even harder,” Ogwude says.

Providers, especially white providers, also have a responsibility to educate themselves on the communities they serve to help clients whose backgrounds differ from their own.

Ogwude believes that to address many of the mental health barriers that impact the lives of Black West Virginians, we must educate ourselves and our peers on the realities of mental health.

Providers, especially, have a responsibility to foster a relationship with the communities they’re serving and normalize seeking help, she said. Providers, especially white providers, also have a responsibility to educate themselves on the communities they serve to help clients whose backgrounds differ from their own.

“I guess by making our services available, and making sure I’m bringing awareness to the community that we’re here, especially as African American therapists, because there’s so few of us out there, that a lot of people in the community don’t even know we exist… So, you know, we have a responsibility as professionals to reach out to the community that needs us… A lot of ways we could do that: visiting schools, visiting churches, involving ourselves in community activities, bringing awareness to our availability,” Ogwude advises.


VIDEO: Dr. Krista Williams Dumas, the ‘UnstuckPsychologist’ on TikTok
@unstuckpsychologist Normalize getting help! #UnstuckPsychologist #StopTheStigma @bloodymaryquiltsociety ♬ original sound – Kristi Williams Dumas

Dr. Kristi Williams Dumas, a forensic psychologist and owner of Dumas Psychology Center, agrees that stigma and a lack of black mental health providers are two of the most prevalent barriers that impact Black West Virginians from seeking mental health treatment. Dumas uses her TikTok account (@unstuckpsychologists) as a platform to spread mental health awareness.

“So the number one thing that impacts the Black community is the stigma behind mental health and getting mental health services. We definitely need to start normalizing people not being in the best mental health state, and we need to normalize people getting help. So, that is the biggest barrier to healing and treatment in the Black community — is the stigma that is on mental health and receiving services. The other thing that I think is very challenging is the fact that in southern West Virginia, we have very few practitioners of color,” Dumas explains.

Dumas traces the history of mental health stigma in the Black communities back to slavery. Historically, Black Americans have been brutalized and disenfranchised in this country, which has created a shared generational trauma which impacts how we deal with emotional issues to this day.

“”I think it comes from slavery and before, where we were not treated as human beings. So, we were socialized to not feel, to not acknowledge pain… We were socialized to suck it up.” ~ Dr. Kristi Williams Dumas

“I think it comes from slavery and before, where we were not treated as human beings. So, we were socialized to not feel, to not acknowledge pain… We were socialized to suck it up. So we, for generations, have been crippled in terms of being able to appropriately express our feelings and our emotions.

“And so we keep that locked up inside, and poor mental health turns into poor physical health. And, so, I think that it is something that we’ve been socialized with and expected to do for years. And now that we’re to the place where we realize just how mentally impaired and physically unhealthy it is, we don’t know what to do about it or how to go about it the right way,” Dumas says.

In addition, the Black church has historically been a significant proponent of mental health stigma. Prayer and unwavering faith in God are often the answers to mental health struggles within the Black community.

“You will hear preachers and pastors get up over the pulpit: ‘You don’t need that psychotropic medication, you know — you don’t need that medication. All you need is Jesus.’ No, pray to Jesus while you take that medication. But so many times, our leaders and our places of worship also perpetuate the stigma of mental health… and that needs to stop, we have to, again, normalize people having faith, but also needing help,” Dumas continues.



Yet Rev. James Patterson, CEO of Partnership of African American Church (PAAC), says it is possible for spiritual counseling and clinical treatment to work in tandem.

“We ought to start accepting and putting systems in place in the congregation to help people with that. And the first thing is, is that we accept and we let it be known and published in the congregation, that we accept the fact that there are mental health problems. And this is our system or our process, in this congregation, in terms of helping a congregant, or church member, deal with the mental health challenge,” Patterson says.

PAAC operates a prevention and recovery wellness center on Charleston’s West Side and a Women’s Residential Facility in Institute, WV. Through his work with PAAC and his experience as a minister, Patterson says he has witnessed how religion and psychology can work together to address an individual’s needs.

“There are Christian therapists. There are therapists that go at therapy from a Christian or from a faith-based perspective. So, the minimum thing that the church could do would be to know who those therapists are, know who those mental health practitioners are, and have a referral system for the congregation,” Patterson states.

Despite her reservations, Dumas agreed that the church could work with mental health professionals in dealing with the psychological issues that may affect their parishioners, provided that the clergy receives the proper training.

“The minimum thing that the church could do would be to know who those therapists are, know who those mental health practitioners are, and have a referral system for the congregation.” ~ The Rev. James Patterson

“I do think partnerships and those types of coalitions are needed. They can be a huge benefit to the community, as long as people are trained to do the work,” Dumas states.

Patterson agrees with the other mental health professionals that normalizing mental illness is the most significant step we can take as a community to address mental health concerns.

“I think a lot of it has to do with education within the community itself. It has to do as well with us, encouraging our young people to go into this discipline as a professional. And then it has to do with us being accepting of our own folks, and helping them and trying to provide some services for them because we understand the culture, we understand the history,” Patterson explains.

Despite the potential progress that normalization could make towards eradicating stigma, West Virginia still does not have the amount of mental health resources to meet the needs of its people. Dumas credits the shortage of resources to the decisions made by our state legislature.

“We are fighting against a state legislature who does not have Black people in the forefront of their agenda. In fact, I know delegates who have dismissed some of the bills that would affect, very proportionately affect, Black people. And have decided that they’re not important because there’s not enough of us here,” Dumas says.



Black-Owned Behavioral Health Agencies and Treatment Centers in West Virginia

Here is a list of active mental health resources for Black West Virginians, including Black-owned behavioral health agencies or agencies that employ Black therapists. The list also includes some non-traditional therapeutic resources. For more information or to add a resource to this list, please email Haadiza@gmail.com.

Dumas Psychology Collective

Location: Beckley, WV
Address: The Brain Training Center, 129 Main, Street Suite 407, Beckley, WV 25801
Phone: 304-278-3338

West Virginia Family Support & Rehabilitation Services

Location: Parkersburg, WV
Address: 214 East 8th Street, Parkersburg, West Virginia 26101
Phone: 3049170021

Second Location: Charleston WV
Address: 1303 Washington Street West, Charleston, West Virginia, 25302
Phone: 304-202-1699

Recovery U

Location: Saint Albans, West Virginia
Address: 6404 Maccorkle Ave SW, Saint Albans, West Virginia 25177
Phone: 681-265-5090

Hope Drug Rehabilitation

Location: Cross Lanes, WV
Address: 5257 Big Tyler Rd Cross Lanes, WV 25313
Phone: 681-217-1121

Harmony Mental Health, Inc.

Location: Parkersburg, WV
Address: 300 Star Ave Suite 321, Parkersburg, WV 26101
Phone: 304-917-4741

Partnership of African American Churches (PAAC)

Location: Charleston, WV
Address: 1514 Kanawha Blvd. West Charleston, WV 25387
Phone: 304-768-7688

Living Water Christian Counseling

Location: Morgantown, WV
Address: 300 Wedgewood Drive Morgantown, WV 26505
Phone: 3042768573

Hidden Peaces

Location: Kearneysville, WV
Address: 179 E Burr Blvd Suite L Kearneysville, WV 25430
Phone: 6812485029

Nurture & Balance, PLLC

Location: Martinsburg, WV
Address: 142 N Queen Street Martinsburg, WV 25401
Phone: 681-248-0294


Behavioral Health Agencies with Black Mental Health Professionals

Appalachian Life Enrichment Counseling Center

Location: Fairmont, WV
Address: 207 Fairmont Avenue Fairmont, WV 26554
Phone: 681-404-6869

Aspire to Inspire Behavioral Health & Addiction Services

Location: Saint Albans, WV
Address: 200 Kanawha Terrace, Suites 1 & 2 St. Albans, WV 25177
Phone: 304-760-9945


Non-Traditional Mental Health Resources

Tapping into Reiki

Location: Green Spring, WV
Phone: 304-501-8747

Hey Girl! Hair and Beauty

Location: Charleston, WV
Address: 3511 Noyes Avenue, Charleston, West Virginia 25304
Phone: 3048079623

Description: Offers two “Me Time” services. The “Girl Listeeeen… Please?” is a one-hour and thirty-minute non-disclosure session where customers are allowed a safe space to vent feelings of frustration, gratitude, anger, resentment, joy, or indifference. This service also includes a basic scalp massage, shampoo, and style. Customers can also purchase a one-hour session called “Just Sit here For a Minute” to just sit and mentally unwind.


Telehealth

Dr. Lana Holmes

Location: Online/Telehealth only
Phone: 6785614187

Dr. Shauna Pollard

Location: Online/Telehealth only
Phone: 2407282338


Other

Therapy For Black Men

Description: We’ve made it our mission to strip away that stigmatization and ease the process of finding help, by providing targeted resources and a database filled with professionals equipped to support men of color, our users can now obtain the help they need and deserve.

National Alliance on Mental Health

Description: A guide on how to seek culturally competent care and for information on more mental health resources

Beam

Description: BEAM is a national training, movement building, and grant making institution that is dedicated to the healing, wellness, and liberation of Black and marginalized communities.

Black Mental Health Alliance

Description: Provides information and resources and a “Find a Therapist” locator to connect with a culturally competent mental health professional.

Black Women’s Health Imperative

Description: Organization advancing health equity and social justice for Black women through policy, advocacy, education, research and leadership development.

Ourselves Black

Description: Provides information on promoting mental health and developing positive coping mechanisms through a podcast, online magazine and online discussion groups.

Therapy For Black Girls

Description: Online space dedicated to encouraging the mental wellness of Black women and girls. Offers listing of mental health professionals across the country who provide high quality, culturally competent services to Black women and girls, an informational podcast and an online support community.


WV Black Mental Health Resources Open Document

NOTE: This link goes to an open document created by BBG. Please feel free to add information


Haadiza Ogwude is a recent graduate of the double master’s degree program in journalism and global mass communication from Ohio University and Universität Leipzig. She is from Parkersburg, WV, where she currently resides. She is related to Gina Ogwude, CEO and owner of West Virginia Family Support & Rehabilitation Services, who was quoted in the article. Black By God The West Virginian seeks to disclose this information in an effort to uphold our values of journalistic integrity and transparency.

WESTVIRGINIAVILLE.com | March 30, 2022 ISSUE
FREE SUBSCRIBE: WestVirginiaVille.substack.com

1) Ashes, Ashes, All Fall Down’: What are you going to do when your complicated family just won’t leave you behind? A personal tale from beyond the grave. | by Doug Minnerly
2) West Virginia Hero’s Life Screens at FestivALL 2022 : Dave Evans lost both legs below the knees in a Vietnam War ambush. What happened next is the stuff of a legendary life told in the new documentary “The Wake Up Call.”
3) Many Fights, One Big Fight: A new book chronicles the history to stay the course of Local 1199, and the longing for fairness within an often heartless industry. | by Eric Neudel
4) Barriers to Mental Health Care for Black West Virginians: Black West Virginians are at a significant disadvantage when dealing with mental health issues. A reprint of a BLACK BY GOD piece by Haadiza Ogwude
5) ‘First Streets in West Virginia:’ A photo-essay on how much the streets of Huntington have changed since the author first stepped onto them in 1980. As well as him. | by Douglas John Imbrogno
6)A Tragedy Full of Joy’: The Complicated American Dream of West Virginia’s Jerry West: Pondering Jerry West life after encountering the star’s 2011 memoir “West by West: My Charmed, Tormented Life.” | Reprint of a John W. Miller essay from Moundsville.org
7) ‘Ukraine Update: ‘Day 34 of Russia’s Cowardly Invasion of Ukraine’: A former West Virginia residents latest posts on Vladimir Putin’s attempted mugging of Ukraine, where two of his daughters live. | by Michael Willard

Leave a Reply