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	<title>Indigenous Women in Science Network</title>
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		<title>Billie Jo Kipp: Indian Country needs Native psychologists</title>
		<link>http://iwsnetwork.org/2011/02/15/billie-jo-kipp-indian-country-needs-native-psychologists/</link>
		<comments>http://iwsnetwork.org/2011/02/15/billie-jo-kipp-indian-country-needs-native-psychologists/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Feb 2011 17:35:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jodi Rave</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Psychology]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The overwhelming need for Native psychologists in Indian country is well documented. The last documented statistic on Native psychologists was approximately 1 for every 100,000 Native patients. As a Native psychologist, this statistic is one of the many reasons for &#8230; <a class="more-link" href="http://iwsnetwork.org/2011/02/15/billie-jo-kipp-indian-country-needs-native-psychologists/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The overwhelming need for Native psychologists<br />
in Indian country is well documented. The last<br />
documented statistic on Native psychologists was<br />
approximately 1 for every 100,000 Native patients. As<br />
a Native psychologist, this statistic is one of the many<br />
reasons for pursuing a Ph.D. in clinical psychology, but<br />
not the foremost.<br />
As a Blackfeet woman, I had lived most of my adult<br />
life on the Blackfeet Reservation. I had raised 5 children<br />
and suffered the social and mental ills of substance<br />
abuse, depression and other health-related difficulties<br />
associated with living in an impoverished community.<br />
With my recovery came awareness and guidance,<br />
in the direction of pursuing a chemical dependency<br />
degree, which became my life’s goal. I left the reservation<br />
and pursued a bachelor’s degree in counseling psychology,<br />
with an associate’s in chemical dependency.<br />
Through this experience, I had the opportunity to work<br />
for a semester on my own reservation. It was then that<br />
I realized the mental health needs of the reservation<br />
demanded more education and skills than I had with my<br />
chemical dependency degree. To address the collective<br />
and individual trauma, it was required that I gain more<br />
education, knowledge and clinical practice to be effective.<br />
It was this that provided me with the direction and<br />
energy to pursue a Ph.D. in clinical psychology.<br />
Education has been a gift, but it has also come with<br />
setbacks and challenges. When Natives pursue a Ph.D.,<br />
they are often challenged to think differently and change<br />
is inevitable, but not always cultural. The Ph.D. program<br />
demanded that I integrate theories and dogmas that conflicted<br />
with being Blackfeet; however, I had to remember<br />
that I had to learn these concepts knowing my ultimate<br />
goal was to obtain my Ph.D. Once I obtained my doctoral<br />
degree, I began to challenge, adapt and change<br />
these teachings to include a Native American perspective,<br />
with the credentials that academia recognizes. This<br />
has been one of the greatest challenges of my work; to<br />
be a Native scholar and research, teach and write from<br />
a Native perspective. The balance between being Native<br />
and gaining the acknowledgement of the academic community<br />
as a valid professor continues to be challenging.<br />
My greatest satisfaction continues to be my clinical<br />
work with tribes. It is through my work as a psychologist<br />
in Indian country that I realize it was all worth it. To<br />
help Native people understand and accept who they are,<br />
despite their social and mental difficulties, is something<br />
that reminds me that my degree is useful and appreciated.<br />
I have been fortunate in my career. I maintain a parttime<br />
research faculty appointment and provide clinical<br />
services to the New Mexico pueblos. This affords me the<br />
academic challenge and the ability to provide to tribes<br />
what is most useful to them. Education has been a difficult<br />
path but, with my degree, I have received many<br />
rewards and have been able to benefit tribes with 15 years<br />
of clinical experience. For those who follow me — keep<br />
focused, stay when challenges are overwhelming, stay connected<br />
to your people and know that, in the end, your<br />
degree not only belongs to you — it moves a nation. ✦<br />
(Billie Jo Kipp conducts research in Mental Health at UNM<br />
CNAH and in Diabetes Management with Project ECHO<br />
at UNM.)<br />
Clinical Psychology<br />
by Billie Jo Kipp, Ph.D.<br />
Billie Jo Kipp<br />
Education has been a gift, but<br />
it has also come with setbacks<br />
and challenges.</p>
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