A shortage in health care workers and stigma have posed problems, but some residents have their eyes on solutions.

Haylin Dennison, a licensed therapist and social worker, is well connected in Oahu鈥檚 behavioral health community, but she still struggled to find mental health services for her transgender son during the pandemic. 

鈥淎ccess is a real issue,” Dennison said, adding that during the coronavirus pandemic “the sickest of the sickest kids couldn’t get treatment for suicide and suicidality.”

The state faces many challenges in addressing and treating residents’ mental health needs, especially in rural areas and on neighbor islands. The behavioral health care worker shortage, for one, has been a persistent issue as a high cost of living and remote locations hamper recruiting efforts. The problem has taken a particularly heavy toll on children in Hawaii. 

鈥淧eople will call us asking, 鈥榟ow can I get services? I’m on this island, and there are no psychiatrists through my son’s insurance. What do I do?鈥欌 said Kumi Macdonald, executive director of . She said waitlists for a therapist or psychiatrist range from one to six months. “Six months is not unusual,” she said.

Hawaii Pacific University mental health textbook students
Students from Hawaii Pacific University pose with copies of a new textbook on mental health practice in the islands. (Courtesy: Hawaii Pacific University/2023)

Despite scarce resources, Dennison and others are focused on finding solutions. 

In March 2022, Dennison opened , a mental health clinic for adolescents that hosts group sessions as a way to keep up with the demand for therapy services. It also provides a space for teens to get to know one another while studying, playing games and drinking boba.

鈥淏uilding community doesn’t have to look like, 鈥極h, we’re just going to sit around and talk about depression.鈥 It’s about exploring yourself and doing really fun activities that are naturally therapeutic,鈥 said Dennison. Both Spill the Tea Cafe and NAMI Hawaii also offer support groups for parents or family members who care for someone with mental illness.

Similarly, Marta Garrett, an adjunct professor at Hawaii Pacific University, struggled to find a textbook for the 11 clinical psychology doctorate students in her evidence-based practice class that took Hawaii-specific considerations into account.

So she assigned her students to work together to write one, which is how “Integrating Evidence-Based Mental Health Practice in Hawaii,” which will be released on Tuesday, came about.

鈥淚n any doctoral course, I would鈥檝e had (the students) write a significant paper, but I thought, 鈥榳hy write a paper that no one but me is going to read?鈥欌 said Garrett.

Because Hawaii is the in the country, the students looked at how cultural factors like immigration status, parenting style and spirituality, among others, might impact treatment for conditions like depression and anxiety.

鈥淲hat does the research say if you have a 30-year-old who is suffering from (a certain) kind of anxiety? And what if that person was of Filipino descent? Or Chinese-Hawaiian?鈥 said Garrett. 鈥淲e scoured all of the research to find what was out there and what was missing, and then looked at how the evidence-based practices would fit within the cultural parameters that we had created in our case studies.鈥

鈥淏uilding community doesn’t have to look like, 鈥極h, we’re just going to sit around and talk about depression.鈥 It’s about exploring yourself and doing really fun activities.”

Haylin Dennison of Spill the Tea Cafe

Each student in Garrett鈥檚 class contributed to the book, including Tori Gutierrez, who worked on the chapters about anxiety disorders, grief and loss, and traumatic brain injury. She found that treatment methods that prove successful in other places, might not work in Hawaii.

鈥淚f someone says, 鈥業’m having problems with my family,鈥 on the mainland, therapists would say, 鈥榃ell, you should distance yourself from your family,鈥 whereas here, I don’t think that would fly at all,鈥 Gutierrez said.

Her approach to each of the case studies in the textbook was guided by culture. A clinician helping someone with anxiety, Gutierrez writes, may benefit from using words or descriptions from the patient’s culture to describe the diagnosis. And for a patient dealing with prolonged grief, Gutierrez discussed how being mindful of beliefs in modern new-age Hawaiian religion may tie into the therapeutic journey.

For Gutierrez, tackling the state鈥檚 mental health needs is about more than just addressing the worker shortage. 

鈥淗awaii needs mental health practitioners. And not just any mental health practitioners, but practitioners who are culturally sensitive and understand where people are coming from and how best to help them,鈥 said Gutierrez.

Civil Beat鈥檚 community health coverage is supported by , Swayne Family Fund of Hawaii Community Foundation, the Cooke Foundation and .

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