Video

Hip-hop offers lens into psyche of black boys, men


 

REPORTING FROM APA 2019

– The lyrics found in hip-hop can help mental health professionals understand the triumphs and trauma experienced by African American boys and men, Sarah Y. Vinson, MD, said at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association. This understanding can enable clinicians to recognize hopelessness and pain in those patients that they otherwise might have missed.

In this video, Dr. Vinson said her session at the APA meeting looked at the history of hip-hop and focused on the perspectives embedded in the work of several artists/groups, including N.W.A, Tupac Shakur, Childish Gambino (aka Donald Glover), J. Cole, and Kendrick Lamar.

One of the take-home points for clinicians, Dr. Vinson said, is that hip-hop, an art form that has spread across the world, came out of resilience. Another is that suicidality in black men might not look the same as it does in other patients. “It doesn’t necessarily look like cutting your own wrists or having thoughts of killing yourself – it may look like reckless behaviors that put you at risk of being killed by somebody else.”

Dr. Vinson, who is triple boarded in child and adolescent, adult, and forensic psychiatry, is in private practice in Atlanta. She had no financial disclosures.

Recommended Reading

Depression: a changing concept in the age of ketamine
MDedge Family Medicine
Brexanolone approval ‘marks an important milestone’
MDedge Family Medicine
My patient will die
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA modifies safety label for Addyi
MDedge Family Medicine
Anxiety, not depression, commonly afflicts euthyroid patients with thyroid disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Depression treatment rates rose with expanded insurance coverage
MDedge Family Medicine
Lifeline calls spike after Robin Williams’ suicide
MDedge Family Medicine
Depressive symptoms are associated with stroke risk
MDedge Family Medicine
Is there an epidemic of anxiety and depression among today’s adolescents?
MDedge Family Medicine
Youth suicide: Rates rising more rapidly in girls
MDedge Family Medicine