Is the Frustration of Basic Psychological Needs Interacting with Language Barriers in Worsening Health Care Access for Black Young Adults during the COVID-19 Pandemic?

The present 3-wave prospective longitudinal study will examine linguistic and motivational factors that may undermine the readiness of Black young adults to seek access to mental health care during the COVID-19 pandemic year. We will also examine whether the motivational factors interact with linguistic minority status in determining how young adults adapt to the challenges of living through the worst pandemic in a century. More precisely, the main objective is to examine whether double minorities (i.e., Black Quebec Anglophones and Black Ontarian Francophones) experiencing need frustration are less likely to seek help for mental health concerns than are Black Quebec Francophones or Black Ontarian Anglophones.

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Francophone Mental Health Care Practitioners’ Perceptions of Working with Anglophone Minorities: Challenges and How They Affect Practice