Providing Equitable and Accessible Mental Health Care to Minoritized Children and Families in Canada: A Case Example

Authors

  • Michelle S. Zepeda University of Calgary
  • Nicole Racine University of Ottawa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47634/cjcp.v58i1.74089

Abstract

Minoritized children and their families living in Canada face a number of barriers to accessing mental health care. This article explores some common barriers related to location, race and ethnicity, language, and financial considerations that minoritized children and their families face when they seek or receive psychosocial interventions within a Canadian context. Practical accommodations and strategies used to address these barriers are discussed and illustrated by an example of work with a Latin American youth and her parents. Implications for the psychosocial treatment of minoritized children and their families are outlined, and calls to action for individual counsellors and for the field of counselling psychology to address barriers are discussed.

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Author Biographies

Michelle S. Zepeda, University of Calgary

Michelle S. Zepeda is a registered psychologist in the province of Alberta. During her doctoral training, Michelle received clinical supervision from Nicole Racine. She is passionate about integrating multicultural psychology and supervision within community mental health and pediatric psychology settings.

Nicole Racine, University of Ottawa

Nicole Racine is an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Ottawa. Her research examines childhood adversity and resilience processes in children and their families.

Published

2025-11-15

How to Cite

Zepeda, M. S., & Racine, N. (2025). Providing Equitable and Accessible Mental Health Care to Minoritized Children and Families in Canada: A Case Example. Canadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 58(1–4), 190–213. https://doi.org/10.47634/cjcp.v58i1.74089

Issue

Section

Articles/ Articles