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To effectively serve minority clients, clinicians require a double
understanding: of both evidence-based practice and the cultures
involved. This particularly holds true when working with
Asian-Americans, a diverse and growing population. The Guide to
Psychological Assessment with Asians synthesizes real-world
challenges, empirical findings, clinical knowledge and common-sense
advice to create a comprehensive framework for practice. This
informed resource is geared toward evaluation of first-generation
Asian Americans and recent immigrants across assessment methods
(self-report measures, projective tests), settings (school,
forensic) and classes of disorders (eating, substance, sexual).
While the Guide details cross-cultural considerations for working
with Chinese-, Japanese-, Korean and Indian-American clients, best
practices are also included for assessing members of less populous
groups without underestimating, overstating or stereotyping the
role of ethnicity in the findings. In addition, contributors
discuss diversity of presentation within groups and identify ways
that language may present obstacles to accurate evaluation.Among
the areas covered in this up-to-date reference: * Structured and
semi-structured clinical interviews.* Assessment of acculturation,
enculturation and culture.* IQ testing.* Personality disorders.*
Cognitive decline and dementia.* Mood disorders and suicidality.*
Neuropsychological assessment of children, adolescents and adults.*
Culture-bound syndromes. Designed for practitioners new to working
with Asian clients as well as those familiar with the population,
the Guide to Psychological Assessment with Asians is exceedingly
useful to neuropsychologists, clinical psychologists, health
psychologists and clinical social workers.
The movements toward cultural sensitivity and evidence-based
practice are watershed developments in clinical psychology. As a
population with a long history of substandard treatment from mental
health systems, African Americans have especially benefitted from
these improvements. But as with other racial and ethnic minorities,
finding relevant test measures in most psychological domains
presents clinicians with an ongoing challenge. The Guide to
Psychological Assessment with African Americans aims to close the
evaluation/therapy gap by giving practitioners the tools to choose
appropriate instruments while respecting client individuality.
Expert contributors analyze scarce and far-flung data, identify
strengths and limitations of measures and norms in their use with
African-American clients, and advise on avoiding biases in
interpreting results. The editors advocate for a theory-based
hypothesis-testing approach to assessment when empirical evidence
is lacking, and offer guidelines for decision-making that is
effective as well as ethnically aware. The Guide's findings,
insights, and practical information cover the gamut of test and
diagnostic areas, including: IQ and personality. Generalized
anxiety disorder, panic, and phobias. Neuropsychological
assessment, cognitive decline, and dementia. Mood disorders and
suicidality. Forensic assessment, risk, and recidivism. Measures
specific to children and adolescents. Plus PTSD, substance
disorders, eating pathology, and more. Expertly complementing
cross-cultural treatment texts, the Guide to Psychological
Assessment with African Americans stands out as a trustworthy
resource for treatment planning useful to clinical psychologists,
neuropsychologists, and clinical social workers.
To effectively serve minority clients, clinicians require a double
understanding: of both evidence-based practice and the cultures
involved. This particularly holds true when working with
Asian-Americans, a diverse and growing population. The Guide to
Psychological Assessment with Asians synthesizes real-world
challenges, empirical findings, clinical knowledge and common-sense
advice to create a comprehensive framework for practice. This
informed resource is geared toward evaluation of first-generation
Asian Americans and recent immigrants across assessment methods
(self-report measures, projective tests), settings (school,
forensic) and classes of disorders (eating, substance, sexual).
While the Guide details cross-cultural considerations for working
with Chinese-, Japanese-, Korean and Indian-American clients, best
practices are also included for assessing members of less populous
groups without underestimating, overstating or stereotyping the
role of ethnicity in the findings. In addition, contributors
discuss diversity of presentation within groups and identify ways
that language may present obstacles to accurate evaluation. Among
the areas covered in this up-to-date reference: Structured and
semi-structured clinical interviews. Assessment of acculturation,
enculturation and culture. IQ testing. Personality disorders.
Cognitive decline and dementia. Mood disorders and suicidality.
Neuropsychological assessment of children, adolescents and adults.
Culture-bound syndromes. Designed for practitioners new to working
with Asian clients as well as those familiar with the population,
the Guide to Psychological Assessment with Asians is exceedingly
useful to neuropsychologists, clinical psychologists, health
psychologists and clinical social workers.
The movements toward cultural sensitivity and evidence-based
practice are watershed developments in clinical psychology. As a
population with a long history of substandard treatment from mental
health systems, African Americans have especially benefitted from
these improvements. But as with other racial and ethnic minorities,
finding relevant test measures in most psychological domains
presents clinicians with an ongoing challenge. The Guide to
Psychological Assessment with African Americans aims to close the
evaluation/therapy gap by giving practitioners the tools to choose
appropriate instruments while respecting client individuality.
Expert contributors analyze scarce and far-flung data, identify
strengths and limitations of measures and norms in their use with
African-American clients, and advise on avoiding biases in
interpreting results. The editors advocate for a theory-based
hypothesis-testing approach to assessment when empirical evidence
is lacking, and offer guidelines for decision-making that is
effective as well as ethnically aware. The Guide's findings,
insights, and practical information cover the gamut of test and
diagnostic areas, including: IQ and personality. Generalized
anxiety disorder, panic, and phobias. Neuropsychological
assessment, cognitive decline, and dementia. Mood disorders and
suicidality. Forensic assessment, risk, and recidivism. Measures
specific to children and adolescents. Plus PTSD, substance
disorders, eating pathology, and more. Expertly complementing
cross-cultural treatment texts, the Guide to Psychological
Assessment with African Americans stands out as a trustworthy
resource for treatment planning useful to clinical psychologists,
neuropsychologists, and clinical social workers.
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