Dr. Bryan Sackey is the founder and CEO of Your Mind Is Our Business. In the nation’s capital, Wards 7 and 8, where health inequities are widespread, a psychopharmacologist is piloting a mental health-coaching virtual platform called “Your Mind Our Business.” It flips the familiar phrase “mind your business” on its head to address a critical issue in Black and brown communities: mental health.
“When we think about the aspect of asking ‘how you are doing?’ You tend to say some form of ‘mind your business.’ This is playing on that whole term and saying, well, your mind is my business.’ Your mind is all of our business,” said Dr. Bryan Sackey, the founder and CEO of Your Mind Is Our Business.
Sackey also added that in areas where there is an unequal distribution of mental health services, for many, it’s hard to realize that they need help, a gap his service aims to fill.
“We sometimes don’t know what we don’t know, right? We don’t know that we are dealing with something, number one,” Sackey said. “Mental health is not one of those things where you see your leg broken and then you say, ‘Oh, okay, I need to go and get this fixed.’”
The virtual coaching service, which caters specifically to Black and brown communities, takes a more accessible approach, allowing individuals to seek help from the comfort of their own homes.
Sackey argues that the District, especially those from lower-income backgrounds, have access issues to health care as a
whole. Reporting from the Washington Post shows half of D.C.’s Black
residents lack access to care. Sackey said his platform will address
this access issue, providing culturally competent services with
providers who look like who they are serving.
“I’m
not saying you have to go to a Black person if you’re Black,” Sackey
said. “But I am saying that sometimes having someone who looks like you
can help you enter into a space and feel more comfortable, and you can
navigate from there.”
The
Howard University-trained doctor recently relocated back home to the
District from Houston, Texas, to help fill gaps in mental health.
“D.C. deserves so much, right?
We’ve been through so many phases in D.C., and sometimes the core community gets lost,” he told The Informer.
He
explained he wants to partner with local organizations, secure grants
and form partnerships to start seeing change in D.C., which was once
called “Chocolate City.”
From
2000 through 2013, aggressive gentrification displaced Black and brown
residents in the District, according to a 2019 study by the National
Community Reinvestment Coalition titled “Shifting Neighborhood
Gentrification Cultural Displacement in American Cities.” The study also
shows that pushing out these communities has, among other things,
prevented them from benefiting from the availability of services that
come with increased investment.
When
it comes to mental health investment in the Black and brown community,
Sackey emphasized he serves with authenticity and puts forth an image
that is relatable.
“I
always want to be authentic in how I present myself. I am just like you,
a Black man in America trying to navigate this world. So I don’t put
myself on some sort of pedestal or present [myself] in a way that I’m
not accessible,” Sackey said, referencing how he shows up when providing
mental health coaching services.
He
wears a doctor-like white coat; underneath, he wears less formal
attire, often wearing a fitted graphic shirt with an inspirational or
contemplative message on it, sweatpants and colorful tennis shoes with a
chain around his neck.
While
he is aiding in tackling mental health inequalities in D.C. by dropping
formalities in his relaxed clothing, he uses his lived experience of
mental health challenges to help connect with his clients.
“I
also try to be vulnerable and describe that within my life, regardless
of what I do as a profession, I’m also a human being, and I deal with
anxiety and depression in various ways [and in] various forms,” he
noted.
A 2022 report
from the World Health Organization (WHO) on mental health titled, “World
Mental Health Report, Transforming Mental Health for All,” reveals that
people with lived experience can be powerful advocates for
people-centered and recovery-oriented mental health care, among other
things.
“Everything
around my life had some level of mental health impact, right? From my
family, community, and so forth, I’ve seen, unfortunately, people who
have died of suicide around me and so it was only a matter of time
[before] God bestowed upon me like ‘this is your mission,’” he said.
Ashley
Dixon, a registered nurse and client of Sackey, also believes this is
his assignment. She praised Sackey for his coaching services, saying
when she met him, she was at a “very low place” in her life.
“He
helped me love myself — and accept other things that maybe were
fractured in my life,” Dixon said. “He literally saved my life. I don’t
know where I would be without him, and I can’t imagine my life without
him. He will always be my coach for the rest of my life.”
The post, “Pharmacist pilots mental health virtual platform to address disparities,” appeared first on The Washington Informer.