AP: Black kids face racism before they start school, driving a mental health crisis

Black children report experiencing an average of five instances of racial discrimination per day, causing a profound impact on their mental health. Research and data show a growing mental health crisis among Black youth over several decades, including a rise in prevalence of suicide attempts among Black adolescents of nearly 80%.

Steven Kniffley Jr., PsyD, senior associate dean for diversity, equity and inclusion at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, told the Associated Press that children of color as young as 4 to 6 years old begin to experience race-based traumatic stress.

This racism affects mental health on multiple levels, including direct hostility and microagressions, but also the toll of seeing other people of color subjected to racist violence, he said.

“When we think about our young folks specifically, because of the strong influence of social media on their lived experience, they’re constantly inundated and really overexposed to all the bad things that are going on in our society,” said Kniffley, who also serves as an associate professor in the College of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience. “You see a police shooting, and they’re retraumatized over and over again.”

Black adolescents are far less likely than their white peers to seek mental health care, in part due to a long history of systemic racism and mistreatment of Black patients by the medical community. There is still work to do on that front, as the American Psychological Association reports only 4% of psychologists are Black and Kniffley noted 80% of mental health providers are not trained in treating race-based trauma.

Specifically within mental health care, racist treatment of Black people includes the 1850s diagnosis of "drapetomania" that argued enslaved Black Americans were driven to escape to freedom due to mental illness. In 1968, psychologists developed the theory of "protest psychosis" that claimed Black male participation in the Civil Rights Movement caused violent, schizophrenic symptoms.

“That legacy has contributed to a mistrust that Black and brown folks have where their experience has been pathologized,” Kniffley said. “They’ve been overlabeled with behavioral challenges and learning challenges that have very real-world consequences in terms of what type of schooling you get, what type of jobs are accessible to you, how people treat you.”

Read the Associated Press story.

Featured photo at top of a child holding an adult's hand outside of a school. Photo/fstop123/iStock.

Related Stories

1

Sugar overload killing hearts

November 10, 2025

Two in five people will be told they have diabetes during their lifetime. And people who have diabetes are twice as likely to develop heart disease. One of the deadliest dangers? Diabetic cardiomyopathy. But groundbreaking University of Cincinnati research hopes to stop and even reverse the damage before it’s too late.

2

Is going nuclear the solution to Ohio’s energy costs?

November 10, 2025

The Ohio Capital Journal recently reported that as energy prices continue to climb, economists are weighing the benefits of going nuclear to curb costs. The publication dove into a Scioto Analysis survey of 18 economists to weigh the pros and cons of nuclear energy. One economist featured was Iryna Topolyan, PhD, professor of economics at the Carl H. Lindner College of Business.

3

App turns smartwatch into detector of structural heart disease

November 10, 2025

An app that uses an AI model to read a single-lead ECG from a smartwatch can detect structural heart disease, researchers reported at the 2025 Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association. Although the technology requires further validation, researchers said it could help improve the identification of patients with heart failure, valvular conditions and left ventricular hypertrophy before they become symptomatic, which could improve the prognosis for people with these conditions.