黑料不打烊 Note: One of the nation鈥檚 preeminent Black psychiatrists, Dr. Ruth Shim, has announced her decision to leave the APA in the recently published piece below. Here鈥檙e a few especially powerful excerpts.
鈥淎fter years of committing myself to the APA and believing that organized psychiatry was an effective vehicle by which progress could be made, racism is driving me and other Black physician leaders out of organized psychiatry, just as it has pushed Black physician leaders .鈥
鈥淥rganized psychiatry has repeatedly refused to examine its contributions to this system. It has not prioritized the needs of minority patients, especially Black patients. In our mental health system, people of color are overrepresented, misdiagnosed, and mistreated, and organized psychiatry has no plan to guide the correction of these well-studied and long-standing inequities.鈥
鈥淲hat is needed now is financial commitment, coupled with accountability, to implement action to begin to systematically dismantle structural racism in organized psychiatry. I have decided, however, that I can no longer fight this battle. I choose to devote my time and loyalty to organizations that share my values and my commitment to achieving racial equity.鈥
Thank you Dr. Shim for your courage, commitment and integrity. We look forward to working with you and others to identify and address how minorities are overrepresented, misdiagnosed, and mistreated within our mental health system and, all too often, are sentenced to broken lives and the horrors of the criminal justice system.
Structural Racism Is Why I鈥檓 Leaving Organized Psychiatry
By Dr. Ruth Shim Stat July 1, 2020
The killings of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and so many others are leading many Americans to reflect on structural racism in society and resolve to do things differently. They have led me to make the difficult decision to end my membership with organized psychiatry, specifically the American Psychiatric Association.
After years of committing myself to the APA and believing that organized psychiatry was an effective vehicle by which progress could be made, racism is driving me and other Black physician leaders out of organized psychiatry, just as it has pushed Black physician leaders .
As a physician, I grew up in the APA. During my residency, I was selected to receive the APA/GlaxoSmithKline Fellowship (now known as the APA/American Psychiatric Association Foundation Leadership Fellowship). Its goal is 鈥渢o prepare future leaders in the field of psychiatry.鈥 I was delighted, and proud, until I read the press release bearing the headline that 10 residents had been awarded the fellowship. Yet only nine names were listed in the release. The name of the only Black person in the fellowship class, mine, . I was hurt but didn鈥檛 at the time feel the need to correct this 鈥渙versight,鈥 and remained silent.
The fellowship itself exposed me to the many opportunities that the APA had to offer. I met important colleagues, mentors, and leaders with whom I still collaborate. In 2007, through the fellowship, I attended the APA鈥檚 annual meeting in San Diego. There, for the first time, I attended a Black psychiatrists鈥 caucus meeting and heard the pain and frustration of my colleagues, who were deeply committed to organized psychiatry but felt strongly that organized psychiatry did not have the same commitment toward them or their patients.
At that meeting I learned that Black psychiatrists had stormed the APA board of trustees meeting in 1969, demanding racial equity. One year later, a appeared in the American Journal of Psychiatry (pages 787 to 818) and included for white psychiatrists 鈥渢o become increasingly aware of how their everyday practices continue to perpetuate institutional white racism in psychiatry and to support the search for realistic solutions,鈥 and to make available 鈥渢he necessary resources of money, manpower, and authority 鈥 and not just in the current token amounts.鈥
Unfortunately, these recommendations were not followed in any significant way, despite the fact that they are still as relevant today as they were 50 years ago.
I left the APA鈥檚 2007 meeting vowing to continue to fight for racial equity from within the organization.
Over the next few years, as a junior faculty member, I dedicated myself to this effort. I submitted abstracts on topics related to improving outcomes for minority populations with serious mental illnesses. I was careful, though, in how I presented these issues in submissions to the APA鈥檚 annual meeting scientific program committee. I hid my interest in 鈥渕inority issues鈥 through coded language such as health disparities and social determinants of mental health. Many times, despite my great efforts to make my interests more 鈥減alatable鈥 to a wide audience, these submissions were rejected.
I found acceptance with the Institute on Psychiatric Services (IPS), APA鈥檚 , which is marketed for public-sector psychiatrists 鈥 those who primarily care for poor patients of color. I began to incorporate discussions about discrimination in psychiatry into my submissions for this meeting. Presentations that were routinely rejected for the APA鈥檚 annual meetings were often accepted and well-received at IPS meetings.
I was grateful to have the IPS as an outlet to grapple with complex issues of structural racism in psychiatry. Sadly, prominent APA leaders have expressed concern that IPS unfairly caters to one group of the APA 鈥 public-sector psychiatrists 鈥 and have explored the financial viability of continuing the IPS meeting.
My direct interactions with APA leaders made me wonder about gaslighting. I often questioned whether unwritten policies were deliberate attempts to impede progress toward achieving racial equity. As co-chair of the 2018 , I and other members of the group volunteered extensive time to develop six recommendations to ensure the financial and logistical stability of future meetings, only to be left doubting if any of these recommendations were ever realistically considered.
For the first time in my career, no IPS meeting was scheduled for fall 2020, a decision made long before the emergence of Covid-19.
I have also experienced countless microaggressions. APA leaders have confused me with other Black women psychiatrists bearing no resemblance to me, interrupted one-on-one conversations I was engaged in without acknowledging my presence to speak with the white man I was conversing with, and have 鈥渁ccidentally forgotten鈥 to acknowledge me when publicly recognizing members for their service to the organization. In each instance, I remained silent. I did not want to make a big deal out of something that seemed so small.
Over time, I achieved some leadership roles in the APA. I am a distinguished fellow of the APA and served several terms on the IPS鈥檚 scientific program committee. I am a member of the editorial boards of and the journal . I have gained much from these experiences, especially under the excellent leadership of these publications鈥 editors-in-chief. I participate in the , although curiously I have never been paired with a Black resident, despite firsthand knowledge of how essential this type of early connection is to career development. I encourage residents to apply for the , even as the APA has quietly instituted unwritten policies that race and ethnicity cannot be considered in selecting minority fellowship recipients, and despite there being no federal mandates that uphold this policy.
These practices have the subtle effect of making it more difficult for psychiatry residents who are underrepresented in medicine to receive these fellowships, although I can鈥檛 point to any verifiable evidence available to support this suspicion, leaving me again to question whether I am being gaslighted.
Although the discrimination I have personally experienced is a problem, the real issue is structural racism, which the as 鈥渁 system in which public policies, institutional practices, cultural representations, and other norms work in various, often reinforcing ways to perpetuate racial group inequity.鈥
Organized psychiatry has repeatedly refused to examine its contributions to this system. It has not prioritized the needs of minority patients, especially Black patients. In our mental health system, people of color are overrepresented, misdiagnosed, and mistreated, and organized psychiatry has no plan to guide the correction of these well-studied and long-standing inequities.
Although there is adequate representation of Black psychiatrists on the APA鈥檚 board of trustees, there are no people of color on the , the highest level of leadership in the organization.
The organization鈥檚 most critical leadership position for undoing structural racism in psychiatry 鈥 the director of the division of diversity and health equity 鈥 has been vacant for more than a year.
Attempts to give voice to psychiatrists who are underrepresented in medicine resulted in the creation of an elected minority and underrepresented trustee who serves on the APA board of trustees.
Unfortunately, the APA has expanded the concept of underrepresented in medicine beyond the to include women and international medical graduates, groups not traditionally underrepresented in psychiatry. The end result is that all identity groups that are not heterosexual white males are pitted against each other to vie for representation and voice in leadership.
Common arguments for lack of appropriate representation in leadership include low numbers of qualified Black psychiatrists and other psychiatrists of color. Yet when Dr. Altha Stewart became president of the APA in May 2018 鈥 the in the organization鈥檚 176-year history 鈥 she appointed many psychiatrists of color to prominent leadership positions throughout the organization.
Sadly, these gains did not persist once her one-year term ended, so recent and about the APA鈥檚 commitment to ending structural racism seem disingenuous.
I will miss the aspects of my professional identity that were forged in organized psychiatry, but I look forward to a time in the future when APA leadership truly understands that the structural racism that pervades the organization must be dismantled. There are clear steps that can be taken. A reasonable plan was in the organization鈥檚 flagship journal.
What is needed now is financial commitment, coupled with accountability, to implement action to begin to systematically dismantle structural racism in organized psychiatry. I have decided, however, that I can no longer fight this battle. I choose to devote my time and loyalty to organizations that share my values and my commitment to achieving racial equity. Even so, I look forward to the day when I can return to the organization that I grew up in and owe so much to 鈥 after I am assured it has made significant progress in addressing systemic racism.
I have been afraid to speak out because of a fear of what it might mean for my career, but I can no longer be silent. My colleagues of all races, ethnicities, and identities have inspired me to use my voice to effect change.
I often use in presentations, but I realize today that I also need to live by it: 鈥淲hen we speak, we are afraid our words will not be heard or welcomed. But when we are silent, we are still afraid. So it is better to speak.鈥
Ruth S. Shim is a physician, director of cultural psychiatry, and professor of clinical psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of California, Davis. She would like to acknowledge helpful feedback and support from Sarah Vinson, Altha Stewart, and Annelle Primm in writing this essay.