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Counseling Latina/Latino Clients
with Patricia Arredondo, EdD
Part of the Multicultural Counseling APA Psychotherapy Video Series

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LIST PRICE: $99.95
MEMBER/AFFILIATE PRICE: $69.95

ITEM #: 4310617
ISBN: 1-59147-268-7
ISBN 13: 978-1-59147-268-1
RUNNING TIME: Over 100 minutes
FORMAT: VHS
Also available in: DVD

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APA Psychotherapy Training Videos are intended solely for educational purposes for mental health professionals. Viewers are expected to treat confidential material found herein according to strict professional guidelines. Unauthorized viewing is prohibited.

ABOUT THE APPROACH

Dr. Arredondo stresses the importance of culture when working with any client, not just Latino/Latina clients: It is always helpful to look at a client's background, upbringing, and family influences as one gathers information about a client. When working with Latino/Latina clients in particular, it is necessary to consider the client's individual heritage: Latino culture varies so significantly among the many Spanish speaking countries, and even among regions of individual countries, that it is impossible to generalize about a Latino/Latina client.

That said, there are some common traits in Latino culture that may be useful as a guide for working with Latino/Latina clients. The most important of these also happens to be a good general rule of therapy: Build rapport with the client. Latino culture values personalismo, or one-on-one relationships between people, so working toward building a good therapeutic relationship should be the first goal of therapy. Personalismo also involves confianza, or demonstration of trust so that the client will be responsive and participatory.

The main approach Dr. Arredondo recommends is working with clients within their context, including ethnic and family heritage and traditions. The client's family and cultural background must be understood if the therapist is to treat the individual, especially in Latino/Latina clients, for whom the family (familia) is usually central. She also recommends a psychohistorical approach to therapy, which is based on Erickson's ideas about taking a chronological history of the client's major life events. Thus, learning about the client's ethnic history as well as personal history may help in the treatment, both as a way of knowing where the client has come from and as a means of discerning his or her goals for the future.

In addition, knowing how a client may have been affected by racism or prejudice because of his or her background may come into play in therapy, especially with Latino/Latina clients, who may have been discriminated against recently or in the past because of language differences, color, national heritage, or other negative projections on the basis of ethnicity. Keep in mind, however, that generalizing about a client's experiences is not productive: It is important to be sensitive to these issues and to be aware that they may arise during the course of therapy.

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