Dr. Thema was elected in 2021 to lead the American Psychological Association. A specialist in trauma recovery, Bryant has long called for psychology to recognize and treat the trauma of racism and be more inclusive toward people of color.
“Hallelujah,” Thema Bryant, 48, said, smiling as her voice boomed through the century-old sanctuary at the Bethel AME Church in West Baltimore. “It’s good to be home.”
Bryant represents a different future for psychology, her colleagues say, at a turning point for the field where providers and recipients of care have long been disproportionately White.
Mental health services have surged in worsening depression and anxiety among Black and Latino people. However, according to 2019 census data, fewer than 1 in 5 psychologists are people of color, and fewer than 1 in 30 are Black.
She has spent her career studying trauma recovery and was among the first psychologists to assert, about two decades ago, that racism can be traumatic.
Bryant said she’s not fazed by people uncomfortable with who she is or what she stands for — not after she’s gone from Baltimore to Liberia and then to Durham, N.C., to attend Duke University. But she sometimes needs to “replenish her cup,” she said. It’s part of why she came home.
Credit: Rebecca Tan "Meet the psychologist drawing from the Black church to reshape mental health care", https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2022/03/27/mental-health-black-baltimore-bryant/
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