An organization dedicated to “healing to communities of color by changing the face and feel of therapy.” Their goal is to make therapists of color more accessible. The search directory tool allows users to filter by location, specialty, service type, ethnicity, and insurance.
This foundation offers Black communities resources, connections, and support needed to help break the silence and stigma around mental health. It offers a directory of mental health providers and programs serving the African-American community, African American Cultural Competency training, a mental health scholarship fund, and more.
BEAM is a national training, movement building, and grant making institution. They’re dedicated to the healing, wellness, and liberation of Black and marginalized communities.
An organization that provides access to evidence-based information and resources about mental health and behavioral health topics from a Black perspective. It highlights and increases the diversity of mental health professionals and decreases the mental health stigma in the Black community. Their services include culturally inclusive mental health and wellness training, youth workshops, and webinars on various topics.
Mental health educational products and therapy services for Africans on the continent, as well as the African diaspora.
This association is an outpatient mental health clinic in Massachusetts. They offer many different mental health services, including individual therapy, family therapy, bilingual services, couples therapy, and more. There are resources for children, adults, and seniors alike.
This is a search engine for searching for Black therapists in the US. Users can filter by state, city, issue (including adoption), and type of appointment.
An article written by an adoptive mother about what every parent should know about transracial adoptions. This article is applicable to adoptees, but focuses on a Black transracial adoptee’s experiences.
A brief article about how the discussion of racism must emphasize marginalized voices. The author explains that discussing racism is never about comforting white people.
A first-person piece about how structural racism exists today. The author explains why she will no longer discusses race with people who won’t consider or acknowledge racism. She asserts that people must acknowledge that they benefit from structural racism and understand that color-blindness is not the solution.