Title: ANGLO-EUROPEAN AMERICAN CULTURE: IMPLICATIONS FOR ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT
1- ANGLO-EUROPEAN AMERICAN CULTURE IMPLICATIONS
FOR ASSESSMENT AND TREATMENT
2- Racial and ethnic minorities accounted for
approximately 80 of U.S. population growth in
the 1990s - In the past 20 years, racial minorities have
increased by more than 90 whites have increased
by 7.6
3My perspective comes from having traveled to
- Philippines (lived there 6-17 years)
- Guam
- Taiwan London Rome
- Hawaii Austria Fiji
- Japan Germany Australia
- Hong Kong Switzerland
- Mexico Paris
- Canada Luxembourg
- Athens Venice
- New Zealand
4I. STEREOTYPES
5Lisas Japanese grandma (immigrated years ago to
the U.S.)
- these days in the U.S.
- Everyone so fat and rude, but I guess that just
part of American freedom.
6http//hot100tips.com/fashion/forever-lazy-footed-
pajamas-as-seen-on-tv/
- Youtube
- adult onesie
- Forever lazy
7Stereotypes continued
8Current Factoids (not on exam)
- American children comprise 3.1 of the worlds
children, and own 40 of the toys - For everyone on Earth to have our lifestyle, it
would take 3 extra planet earths - The top 20 of people in the world consume 80 of
its resources - The poorest 20 of our planet lives on 1.3 of
its resources
9More factoids (not on exam)
- According to theweek.com/Pew Research Center
- 50 of Americans own smartphones
- 58 check their phones at least once every hour
- Internet users in the U.S. spend more than 2
billion hours a month on sites like Facebook and
Twitter, up 37 from 2011
10Aging (not on exam) (U.S. Bureau of the Census,
2012)
- In the year 2000, the median age in the U.S. was
35.3 years in 2012, it was 37.4 years. - Median age for non-Hispanic Whites-42 yrs.
- Median age for Asians-34 yrs.
- Median age for African Americans-less than 32
yrs. - Median age for Hispanicsless than 28 yrs.
11For the exam
12Statistics show (not on exam)
- In 1950, for everyone 65 years old, there were
12 younger people working and paying taxes - In 2050, for everyone 65 years old, there will
be 3 younger people working and paying taxes - Millions of old people getting expensive medical
care will be supported by the taxes of 3
teenagers working at Burger King ?
13In terms of poverty and income, in 2011 (National
Center for Education Statistics, 2013).
- 12 of Asian children were poor
- 13 of White children were poor
- 30 of Pacific Islander children were poor
- 34 of Hispanic children were poor
- 36 of American Indians were poor
- 39 of Black children were poor
14For the exam.
15White Privilege (Teaching Tolerance, 2015)
16II. CULTURAL BELIEFS
17Its all about the selfie
18McMahan (www.rususa.com)
19McMahan (contd)
20Turn to the people next to you
- Share some examples of how, for you and/or those
you know, time-saving devices have actually
meant that you do more work
21B. Family Life
- Nuclear householdsseparate ages
- Children and elderly cared for by outsidersOK
- Mother responsible for everything (not extended
family, neighborhood)
22III. COMMUNICATION STYLES
23IV. HEALTH CARE AND DISABILITIES
- Chronic disabilities account for a larger portion
of health issues in the U.S. than in its economic
peers around the world. - Many of these chronic disabilities are caused by
bad food choices, obesity, smoking, physical
inactivity, and alcohol abuse. However, there has
been a significant drop in disability and death
from HIV/AIDS.
24Sitting is the new smoking
25Recent statistics show (not on exam)
- Medicare spending for decedents (persons in their
last year of life) in the U.S. is 6x greater than
costs for survivors. The last month of life is
especially expensive Medicare spends an average
of 6,620 in the last month of a persons life
vs. 325 for survivors. More than 25 of Medicare
spending goes to the 5 of beneficiaries who die
each year. On average, Medicare spends 20,870
per beneficiary who dies in the hospital.
26In the U.S., we
27(No Transcript)
28(Overhead)
- Please know the table on p. 50 for test 1