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Dr. Carmen Vazquez

Resources for cross-cultural and immigrant mental health

and psychological services for North American children, adolescents, adults

 

Dr. Carmen Inoa Vazquez

 

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Book: The Maria Paradox
Book: Grief Therapy with Latinos
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To Contact Dr. Vazquez

By Mail:

110 East 40th Street

New York, NY 10016

 

By Phone:

(212) 972-1777

 

By E-mail (Click Here)

Do not send private information. E-mail is not confidential.

Dr. Vazquez is proud to announce the publication of her latest book:

 

EVENTS: Friday, October 14, 2011, 9:15 -10:30 A.M. Dr. Vazquez is the Keynote Speaker at the Rutgers Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology  8th Multicultural Competence Across Settings event.  Her presentation is entitled "Considering Culture and Loss in Clinical Interventions: Grief Therapy with Latinos." 

Saturday, November 12, 2011, 10:15 -11:15 A.M. Dr. Vazquez is a Plenary Panelist: "Faith, Culture and Grief." Conference is "Healing: Grief, Compassion and Hope" at St. John’s University, 8000 Utopia Parkway, Queens, NY D’Angelo Center Room 416

© Copyright 2005-2011 by Carmen Vazquez, Ph.D.  All rights reserved.

 

 

Article from the New York State Psychological Association:

 

  • Newspaper cites NYSPA member as “one of today’s leading authorities on bilingual and bicultural treatment”
  •   media interview

    Carmen Inoa Vazquez, Ph.D., speaks out about bilingual and bicultural mental health treatment and training

    “The most important cultural factors” that need to be addressed in the “treatment of Hispanic individuals and/or families include the traditional values of machismo, marianismo, familismo, and personalismo,” states NYSPA member Carmen Inoa Vasquez, Ph.D. She is the leader of two major bilingual and bicultural treatment programs, The Institute for Multicultural Behavioral Health (IMBH) and the Bilingual Treatment Program (BTP) Clinic at Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City. Her comments appeared in a front- page interview with Salud Mental, the quarterly newspaper of Mental Health News Education, Inc.

    Machismo and marianismo “refer to gender specific behaviors that, in many instances, determine expectations on how someone should act on the basis of their gender,” explained Dr. Vazquez. “These cultural beliefs could hold a negative and a positive value.”

    The value of “familismo, the centrality of and importance of the family, is also important when working with Latino families,” she continued. “All cultures value the family, but for Latinos/Hispanics, familismo includes the added dimension of the extended family – grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, stepchildren, older children who have children of their own and the spouses of those older children living together as a unit.”

    Responding to a question about the most important areas relevant to the training of bilingual/bicultural clinicians, Dr. Vazquez cited five areas:

    1. “The impact of immigration on the understanding of stressors that individuals and families are exposed to.
    2. The impact of acculturation on the understanding of stressors while individuals and families are adapting to a new culture.
    3. The role of language in the assessment of individuals to determine treatment and to understand mental illness and mental health.
    4. The role of culture language in the assessment of individuals to determine treatment and to understand mental illness and mental health.
    5. The homogeneity of the Latino population residing in the United States. This includes the differences, similarities, and specifics of each group.”

    The article also covers the activities of and treatment by the BTP Clinic and the IMBH, as well as a summary of the latest book by Dr. Vazquez and its relevance for bilingual and bicultural clinicians.

       

    Read the entire article from Salud Mental.