Why Culturally Competent Care Matters: Bridging Identity and Mental Health
Culturally competent care matters because effective mental health treatment depends on whether a person feels understood, respected, and safe with their provider.
By recognizing how identity, culture, and lived experience shape emotional distress, licensed therapists can build stronger trust, reduce barriers to care, and offer support that feels more personal and effective.
As therapy becomes more common, experts are urging providers to recognize how identity and lived experience shape what care actually feels like for each patient.

More than half of adults living with a mental health condition in the United States never receive treatment, and the reasons go far beyond whether a therapist is available or affordable.
Research published by the National Institutes of Health shows that many people from marginalized communities face added challenges, including bias from providers and a lack of care that reflects how they experience stress or emotional pain. And even after someone decides to seek help, those challenges often continue.
Research in the 2025 State of Stigma survey, conducted by BetterHelp, shows that more than 16,000 people across 23 countries still face fears and cultural beliefs that keep many from seeking support.
And for those who do connect with a provider, the experience does not always feel right, with nearly one in three Gen Z respondents who had attended therapy reporting that they felt misunderstood. The efforts to expand mental health care have made a difference, but access alone has never guaranteed that someone will feel supported once they get there.
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What “Culturally Competent Care” Actually Means
Culturally competent care is one of the most important standards in modern mental health practice, and it requires more than clinical training alone. The American Psychological Association describes it as an effort to understand how a person’s cultural identity, background, and lived experience shape the way they process and express emotional pain.
A provider working this way does not rely on a single clinical lens, since the same symptom can show up in very different ways depending on who is experiencing it and how they understand it.
Research from Medical News Today shows that some communities express distress through physical symptoms like fatigue or stomach pain rather than naming sadness or anxiety directly. A provider who misses that difference may also miss what a client is trying to communicate.
Cultural competence also requires an understanding of family and community ties, especially where care is shaped by more than one person’s voice.
Why Representation and Understanding Matter in Therapy
Therapy works best when a person feels safe enough to be honest, and that safety is built almost entirely on trust. Research published in Psychotherapy Research by Horvath and Greenberg found that clients who feel understood by their therapist are more likely to stay in treatment and make real progress.
But for people who have experienced bias or dismissal from doctors and healthcare providers in the past, building that trust takes longer and requires more from a therapist than clinical training alone can provide.
Adam Greenberg, LCSW, has written that the strength of the relationship between a therapist and client predicts positive results more reliably than any specific therapy technique. And when a person arrives at therapy already carrying doubt about whether they will be heard, a single moment of feeling dismissed can end the process entirely.

Mental Health Access Gaps Across Communities
Growing awareness of mental health has not translated into equal access for everyone who needs care.
A 2022 survey by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration found that while rates of mental illness are similar across racial and ethnic groups in the United States, only 37.9% of Black Americans and 39.6% of Hispanic Americans received mental health treatment, compared to 56.1% of white Americans.
Cost is still the most common reason people do not seek help, and where someone lives can make that challenge even harder to overcome, with the Association of American Medical Colleges noting that 65% of rural counties have no practicing psychiatrist at all.
And even when people do find their way to care, a provider workforce that remains largely white and often lacks training in cultural differences can leave patients without the level of care they need.
Martyn Whittingham, PhD, a licensed psychologist writing for the American Psychological Association, addressed this directly, saying, “Too often people from marginalized communities struggle to access quality psychotherapy.”
How the Healthcare Industry Is Responding
Across the healthcare industry, institutions are moving beyond simply opening a clinic door and hoping people walk through it. The American Psychological Association has documented a growing effort to build care around the people receiving it, with more providers being trained to better understand how patients experience emotional distress.
Those efforts to improve care are also happening earlier, as mental health support becomes part of primary care and more people encounter it before their situation becomes urgent. And Telehealth has become a larger part of that response, with UnitedHealthcare’s behavioral health data showing that from January through June 2024, mental health conditions were the most common reason people used telehealth services nationwide.
As more people begin care through these options, the way they choose a provider is also changing, with digital platforms giving them more control in finding someone who feels like a better fit from the start.
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Find your matchWhy Inclusivity Is Becoming a Standard Expectation
Inclusivity has become a core expectation people bring to care, and few areas feel that more directly than mental health. Younger generations, especially Gen Z, are far more likely than older groups to see their identity as closely tied to how they experience emotional distress, and they look for providers who understand that connection without needing it explained.
BetterHelp’s 2025 State of Stigma report found that Gen Z is more than twice as likely as Baby Boomers to experience moderate to severe anxiety, yet 37% of those who have sought counseling believe people who go to therapy are still seen as mentally weak.
Holding both of those realities at once shapes how they approach care, with a strong desire for support alongside real doubt about whether it will feel safe or respectful. Culturally competent care responds to that doubt, and many health systems are beginning to treat it as a standard part of care rather than something extra.
What the Future of Mental Health Care May Look Like
Mental health care has come a long way, and the direction it is heading is more personal and more reflective of the people it actually serves. Research published in Psychology Today found that when therapy is tailored to a person’s specific needs rather than applied as a standard protocol, patients achieve better results than those receiving uniform treatment.
Meeting those individual needs depends on how well a provider understands the person in front of them, which has led to provider networks expanding to include more bilingual clinicians and therapists from a wider range of backgrounds.
Greater representation allows more people to begin care without explaining core parts of who they are, which helps conversations move forward more naturally. When those conversations begin with less strain, therapy becomes easier to return to, and flexible options like virtual care help remove the barriers that can interrupt that progress.
Effective Care Starts With Understanding
Mental health care should always start with the person seeking help. And real understanding starts when a provider takes identity and lived experience seriously from the beginning. Those details shape how emotional pain is named, and they also affect whether therapy feels safe enough to trust.
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