Clinician-Reported Person-Centered Culturally Responsive Practices for Youth with OCD and Anxiety

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Abstract

Highlights: What are the main findings? Clinicians working in community mental health clinics described the need to understand their clients’ culture and context and noted ways in which they addressed these factors. Clinicians described incorporating culture and context through adapting existing treatment techniques, augmenting treatment with strategies not traditionally included in Ex-CBT, and utilizing process-based approaches. What is the implication of the main finding? Learning from practicing clinicians’ approaches and challenges can help to inform clinical recommendations for more person-centered culturally responsive anxiety and OCD treatment for minoritized youth. Background: Exposure-based cognitive behavioral therapy (Ex-CBT) is widely seen as the gold-standard treatment for anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Yet, minoritized youth are underrepresented in efficacy studies, raising questions about the applicability of Ex-CBT to minoritized youth. Effectiveness data suggest systematic adaptation of Ex-CBT to address youth culture and context is likely needed, and many clinicians make adaptations and augmentations in practice. However, research on the specific strategies clinicians use to address their youth clients’ culture and context within anxiety and OCD treatment is lacking. In the current study, we assess practice-based adaptations, augmentations, and process-based approaches utilized when delivering treatment to youth for OCD and anxiety in public mental health clinics. Methods: We conducted qualitative interviews with 16 clinicians from both specialty anxiety and general mental health clinics serving youth with anxiety or OCD in the public mental health system. Participating clinicians had a mean age of 32.19 (SD = 5.87) and 69% of therapists identified as female; 69% identified as White, 25% identified as Asian, and 6% as Black or African American. In qualitative interviews, clinicians shared how they addressed clients’ culture and context (e.g., social identities, stressors and strengths related to social identities and lived environment). Thematic analysis identified the strategies clinicians employed to address culture and context. Results: Clinicians reported incorporating culture and context through process-based approaches (e.g., building trust gradually, considering clients’ social identity stressors, engaging in self-awareness to facilitate cultural responsiveness) and through culturally adapting and augmenting treatment to promote person-centered care. Core strategies included proactive and ongoing assessment of clients’ cultural and contextual factors, adapting exposures and augmenting Ex-CBT with strategies such as case management and discussion of cultural context, and taking a systems-informed approach to care. Conclusions: Examining practice-based adaptations, augmentations, and process-based approaches to treatment for minoritized youth with OCD or anxiety can inform efforts to understand what comprises person-centered culturally responsive Ex-CBT. Empirical testing of identified strategies is a needed area of future research.

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Flowers, S. N., Sanchez, A. L., Siddiqui, A., Weiss, M., & Becker-Haimes, E. M. (2025). Clinician-Reported Person-Centered Culturally Responsive Practices for Youth with OCD and Anxiety. Children, 12(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/children12081034

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