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Bridging the Salud Mental Gap

A group of 15 people pose for a photo holding certificates at a Mental Health Partnership graduation ceremony for Spanish-speaking Certified Peer Specialists.

March 2024 Spanish language CPS graduation. Photo courtesy of Mental Health Partnerships.

In 2022, Paola Franchini and her children had barely made it out of their home when it exploded from a chimney fire. Franchini, who moved to the U.S. from Chile in 2001, had spent most of her adult life helping members of the Hispanic and Latino community adopt healthier habits as a lifestyle coach and through her business, Vida Sana, Vida Feliz. After being left with burns on her face and body, as well as emotional and mental scars, Franchini suddenly realized she would now have to learn to cope with her own trauma and health.

Franchini believes that being connected with someone who had overcome trauma from her Latinx community would have made a big impact in her recovery.

“It’s amazing to have someone who supports you and visits you and empathizes with what happened or is happening to you,” she says. “Having someone by your side who experienced trauma can give you so much hope. I would’ve felt really good.”

Today, Franchini is one of 13 recent graduates of a Certified-Peer-Specialists (CPS) class facilitated by the non-profit mental health advocacy organization Mental Health Partnerships (MHP). Like many CPS classes in the past, this one is diverse — some members are older; some came from Puerto Rico; others came from Colombia; some lived with substance abuse; others spent years with depression. However, these graduates have two things in common: 1. They are in or have been through behavioral health recovery. 2. They all speak Spanish.

The growing mental health crisis among Latino and Hispanic Americans

In Philadelphia, as in most of the nation, mental stress among adults is worsening. What is less often publicized: Mental stress is worsening most among Hispanic and Latino individuals.

Nearly 30 percent of Philadelphia’s Hispanic residents report experiencing five or more days a month of mental stress, according to The City of Philadelphia’s 2021 Health of the City report, compared to 21.2 percent of White and 20.1 percent of African American respondents. In addition, Hispanic males have the second-highest percentage of reports of death by suicide, behind White males. (The report does not separate Hispanics and Latinos.)

“There’s a centrality to the human experience where we gravitate to those that best understand us, to those that share identities with us.” Racquel Assaye, MHP.

Despite these rates, Hispanics and Latinos are the second least likely group to receive mental health treatment nationwide. (The least likely is Asians.) According to The National Alliance of Mental Illness, only 36.1 percent of Hispanics and Latinos received treatment, compared with over half of their White counterparts. In Philadelphia, the issue is compounded by the fact that Hispanic communities have the highest percentages of uninsured children and adults.

That’s what prompted MHP to facilitate an all-Spanish CPS class with Spanish-speaking students like Franchini.

Peer-to-peer support

MHP set out on a mission to increase access to mental health services 70 years ago. Starting out, the independent non-profit organization played a key role in shutting down abusive and misguided state mental hospitals that often confined people with mental health challenges against their will.

“Our primary charge was to get rid of the stigma and to get rid of mandatory confinement,” says MHP’s Acting President and Chief Executive Officer Racquel Assaye. Back then, people who were diagnosed with schizophrenia were treated the same way as somebody with, say, dyslexia. Today, MHP specializes in treating vulnerable populations, including older adults, people with addiction, and members of the LGBTQ+ community.

Today, MHP has five brick-and-mortar locations in Philadelphia, five more in the suburbs, and two in Delaware that provide a wide range of services for people and family members of people experiencing homelessness, substance abuse and other mental health conditions. Their model is, in large part, predicated on peer-to-peer counseling and guidance from CPSes

MHP offers free Certified Peer Specialist training for people who are over age 18, have passed background checks, and have experienced a behavioral health disorder or are currently in recovery. Training lasts 75 hours, typically two weeks, and, if successful, results in a CPS certificate from the Pennsylvania Certification Board.

In 2017, MHP established a new way to connect people in need of behavioral health support with CPSes: an English language Peer Support Chatline, open Monday through Friday from 9am to 7pm. Last year, MHP trained 406 CPSes to work the chatline — all in English.

The success of this program emphasized the lack of services available to Spanish speakers. “There’s a centrality to the human experience where we gravitate to those that best understand us, to those that share identities with us,” says Assaye.

A new class of Certified Peer Specialists

But training Hispanic and Latino peers to become CPSes isn’t just about linguistics. “We tend to feel more inclined to share our struggles if we know that there will be empathy,” says Assaye. “And more than that, there’ll be understanding.”

Assaye points out that immigrants comprise 33 percent of the Hispanic and Latino community. According to the American Psychological Association, many Latino immigrants experience stressors related to migration, such as language barriers, family reunification and discrimination.

“They are already experiencing a mental health issue, but they’re experiencing it in the context of both racism as well as immigration status acculturation,” Assaye says. “It will be best if we’re using the same peer model where somebody needs to understand your situation, and better be able to speak to you with understanding and empathy.”

While many CPS graduates work operating MHP’s chatline, staying with the organization is not a requirement. Once they receive their certification, CPSes can work anywhere in Pennsylvania. For MHP, investing in training Spanish-speakers was an important step towards providing PA’s Hispanic communities support from someone who understands them.

In Philadelphia, as in most of the nation, mental stress among adults is worsening. What is less often publicized: Mental stress is worsening most among Hispanic and Latino individuals.

Community in diversity

Franchini and her classmates’ graduation took place at Community Behavioral Health’s Center City suite at 8th and Market streets. The ceremony featured speeches from Assaye, DBHIDS Commissioner Jill Bowen — and each of the 13 graduates. Some shared their motivations to complete the training despite enduring emotional challenges, and others shared the life experiences that led them to want to help others who struggle alone. Onlookers cried tears of joy and pride as they witnessed their loved ones taking a step towards self-improvement.

The graduates’ different nationalities and backgrounds reflect the diversity found in Philadelphia’s Hispanic and Latino communities. Franchini says that was the best part of the experience for her.

“Listening to their stories was extremely inspirational for me,” she says. “Seeing that people made it to the CPS program despite what they’ve been through showed me that wanting is power. We want to show other Latinos that if we did it, they can do it too. As a Latina immigrant in this country, I feel proud to be part of this project and we’re ready to go out to offer hope to the Latino community, which really needs it.”

The MHP 9am-7pm Chat Line can be accessed through their website. They can be reached through their site or via phone number at (800) 688-4226.

If you are having thoughts of suicide, call or text 988.

Clarification: MHP would like to further clarify that the majority of CPS graduates go on to find employment outside MHP.

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