We are currently navigating a paradox. While the terms “equity” and “cultural work” are frequently diluted or attacked by misinformation, the clinical and community-based reality as documented in the recent Psychiatry Online reporting—is that these concepts are not just “important”; they are life-saving interventions. For organizations currently stepping back from these commitments, we must ask:
If we stop the work of equity, are we also choosing to stop the work of healing? To move forward, we must stop viewing these as separate administrative checkboxes and start seeing them as the twin engines of Healing-Responsive Care.
Before continuining, I want to Honor the Architects of Knowledge
While academic journals are finally visibilizing or putting names to these “interventions,” cultural leaders and grassroots organizations have known this for generations. For those of us who have spent 15 years walking alongside these leaders, we know that mutual aid and healing-responsive care weren’t discovered in a lab. They were perfected in the living rooms and community centers of those whom the system ignored.
The fact that these voices are often missing from “official” reports does not make their expertise any less scientific or valid. Organizations retreating from equity aren’t just “pivoting”—they are turning their backs on a deep well of ancestral and professional expertise that has sustained communities through far worse eras of misinformation.
The Myth of Separation: Why Equity and Culture are One
The current political climate pressures organizations to “separate” equity—the systemic distribution of resources—from cultural work—the honoring of specific traditions and healing practices. However, to separate them is to strip both of their power.
- Equity without Culture is sterile. It creates “one-size-fits-all” access to systems that were never designed for communities of color. It is a door left open to a room where no one speaks your language.
- On the flip side, Culture without Equity is performative. It celebrates “healing circles” or “mutual aid” without addressing the systemic trauma, such as detention and structural exclusion, that necessitates those circles in the first place.
True healing is multilevel. When we provide trauma-informed, language-concordant care, we are doing the work of equity. When we integrate community-rooted healing, we are doing cultural work. They meet at the intersection of a child’s well-being.
The Risk of the “Great Retreat”
For organizations deciding to pause or stop equity initiatives: consider the cost of silence. When we allow equity to be misrepresented, we allow the most vulnerable like immigrant children and adolescents to be erased from the care continuum. A healing-responsive framework makes it clear:
- Individual Care (Psychiatric support) fails without incorporating Collective Care (Promotora-led education) and culturally responsive care that aligns with individual values, beliefs, and identities. This includes language-concordant care and healing through creative expression like music and art.
- Collective Care fails without Systemic Justice (Rights-based policy), healing circles, community-based research, and mutual aid networks.
If an organization removes the equity pillar, the entire structure collapses. You cannot treat a child’s trauma if you refuse to acknowledge the systemic roots of that trauma.
A Call to Resilience
We do not need to save the word “equity” for its own sake; we need to protect the human beings that equity was designed to serve. The misinformation of our era thrives on the idea that these efforts are divisive, but there is nothing divisive about a healing-centered approach that restores wellness to a family.
To the leaders at a crossroads: do not let a temporary climate dismantle fifteen years of proven, community-led wisdom. We don’t need to separate equity and cultural work. We need to fuse them so tightly that the work becomes undeniable. Our task is to move past the definitions and get back to the results: strengthened families, restored wellness, and a system that finally honors the humanity of every community.
