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Main course

Module 1: Immigration and social determinants of health

Module 2: Intro to Mental Health

Summary

Module 3: Key populations - women

Module 4: Key populations - children

Module 5: Key populations...

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Module 6: Treatment and support

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Module 7

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Module 8: Service delivery + pathways to care

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Module 9: Partnerships + mental health promotion

9.1 Strategies for promoting mental health
Strategies for promoting mental health + +
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Module 10: Self-care

Summary Glossary
7.2.5

Bias

The term “bias” (also referred to as “implicit bias” and “unconscious bias”) refers to assumptions, beliefs, attitudes and stereotypes regarding different groups of people. These learned mental shortcuts affect how we perceive and respond to people (Haselton et al., 2005).
Bias can be based on various social identities, such as:

“Biases are learned through social context within families, cultures, religions, spiritualities, secularism, ideologies and societal contexts” (Haselton et al., 2005).

Bias leads to stereotypes that are often conveyed through ordinary, subtle and unconscious processes. Even the most well-meaning and intentionally egalitarian person who holds a harmful stereotype of a social group will likely discriminate against someone from that group. They are “universal processes and all people are capable of them” (Williams, 2018; American Psychological Association[APA], n.d).

One sign of persistent racism in a society is the high level of harmful stereotypes held by the population. Cultural racism can prompt unconscious bias against Black clients, families and communities, which can result in fewer opportunities to access services and resources that enhance health. This has been well-documented in the case of medical care, including mental health care (Williams, 2018; APA, n.d.).

Video: Effects of Bias

With Sharon Douglas (Director, United Way Peel Region)

Bias often appears to be innocent, conversational pieces or statements but what's included in those biases are the assumptions and the perceptions that we have of one another and communities, and particularly when we speak about the Black community and the older Black population, or older adults, we wonder: "What does that mean for them?"I'm sure that at some point some of them may have heard the comment:"Oh, you are so articulate."But what does that mean? Where does that come from? Does that mean we're uneducated, we're not intelligent, we don't know the language?But these comments are, we believe, intended to be complementary but they are not.So the next time that you are in conversations with different communities, pause for a moment, breathe and reflect and check your assumptions before you begin to speak.

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Featured resource

Project Implicit, delivered from Harvard University, is a non-profit organization and international collaborative of researchers who are interested in implicit social cognition. Its “implicit association test” allows you to assess your unconscious bias.

click Take the implicit association test