Occupational Therapy News July 2020 | Page 3

This issue unashamedly shines a spotlight on the reality of structural racism and discrimination. Kwaku Agyemang, an occupational therapist who created the ‘OT and Chill’ podcast, and Musharrat J Ahmed-Landeryou, an occupational therapy lecturer at London South Bank University, look at the global impact of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, following the very public murder of George Floyd on 25 May 2020 in the US. Following an episode of Kwaku’s podcast to explore BAME occupational therapists’ experiences within the profession, here they share some of the painful experiences students, occupational therapists and educators have experienced. From daily microaggressions and unconscious bias in the workplace, a university experience that can exacerbate segregation, especially in the classroom, a lack of support and understanding on placements, to a lack of representation in leadership roles, they demonstrate that structural racism is real. Musharrat goes further and says: ‘If we are a profession that believes in advocating and empowering those we work with, we cannot continue to stand by and watch colleagues feel the way they do.’ They urge occupational therapists to form alliances, to be local activists, to push for change, for fairness and justice, and to engender change and representation through one interaction and one intervention at a time. Then, in an article written before the death of George Floyd, on pages 20 to 22, Awele Odeh shines a light on discrimination in the profession, an issue she asserts that is rarely discussed. Using the Gibbs’ reflective cycle, she shares her own experience of discrimination during her undergraduate training and practice as a clinician, and urges people to start talking about diversity and inclusion. Occupational therapist Somia Elise Jan, who is of dual heritage, has also been compelled to reflect more deeply on her own experience of coming from a minority background and on her journey to becoming an occupational therapist. In this issue, she is urging the occupational therapy profession to be more open, and for others enduring similar hardships to share their experiences. Turn to pages 24 to 26. And finally, on the Unison page we ask head of equality Gloria Mills to provide some context on racism in the UK and explain how the union is at the forefront of the fight against it. As Kwaku and Musharrat stress, it is okay to talk to your BAME colleagues about racism and discrimination. It is okay to feel uncomfortable, because it is. editor’s comment Tracey Samuels, Editor If you have any feedback about this issue of OTnews, or would like to contribute a short article or feature for a future publication, please email me at: [email protected]