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GWI Q&A: Canyon Ranch’s Nicola Finley talks inequality and the black community’s concept of wellness
By Megan Whitby 12 Aug 2020
According to Finley, many people of colour have not felt seen, heard or valued by the wellness industry Credit: GWI
Dr Nicola Finley, doctor and integrative medicine practitioner at Canyon Ranch, Tucson, spoke with GWI’s VP of research and forecasting, Beth McGroarty, for the latest instalment of the PositivelyWell Q&A series.

Finley focused on inequality in wellness for communities, looked at how women of colour are served by the industry and shed more light on the black community’s concept of wellness.

Spa Business has rounded up key points from the interview before the full version is broadcast later this week.

Inequality in wellness
According to Finley, many people of colour have not felt seen, heard or valued by the wellness industry.

They may feel unwelcome in the wellness sector because it’s so homogenous, she says – to the point where the spa and wellness industry has neglected to embrace the large and profitable market represented by black and Latina women.

“Places are more welcoming when everyone is not the same race, age, body type and/or socioeconomic background and there is diversity – in terms of race, gender, body type, age or disability. This really helps,” she said.

Moreover, Finley says that as a black woman, she feels spas don’t generally cater to the needs of diverse communities.

She gives the example of having to bring her own shampoo and conditioner to spas, because what they provide isn’t moisturising enough for her hair. Makeup services also often don’t offer colours that work for her skin tone.

“It’s hard to understand: they want me as a customer, and yet they're not demonstrating that,” she explained.

“These are little things, but little things add up to something big. If companies want to tap into and serve these lucrative markets, we need to take the next step and have people of colour in leadership roles where they’re in a position to make changes and decisions.”

Integrative wellness
Finley proposed that COVID-19 has underlined the need to embrace integrative medicine, because it addresses the whole person – including their body, mind and spirit – which could help address inequality within wellness.

The integrative model holds that a person’s ethnicity, environment, emotions, family structure, and lifestyle (whether access to exercise or healthy food) have a huge impact on their health.

She also believes wellness professionals and doctors should be trained in and practice cultural humility. Meaning they’re not only taught about other cultures, but also how to practice self-reflection and apply a self-critique to their own implicit biases and how that impacts their behaviour.

“Working on cultural humility is crucial in the wellness space because there’s just not enough diversity among providers yet, “ she explains.

“For instance, dieticians and nutritionists are overwhelmingly not from communities of colour. But practitioners can take better care of diverse and vulnerable populations if they practice cultural humility in addition to cultural competency.”

Finley feels that in order to bridge the health/wellness inequality gap, the industry also needs to help educate underserved populations to become health-literate and aware of the importance of prevention.

Different concepts of wellness
In general, she says she has found that communities of colour embrace a more integrative concept of health – not just traditional medicine, but also a greater openness to natural and alternative approaches.

She told McGroarty that black communities’ concept of wellness in particular, very often has ‘spirituality at the centre’.

However, she highlighted that the narrative surrounding wellness needs to change for these communities, in order for them to embrace it.

More people of colour would explore wellness if they didn’t assume it was a luxury, but instead saw it as an important way of taking care of themselves with self-care practices.

COVID-19 and the wellness market
In Finley’s opinion, COVID-19 has made wellness a stronger market and something that’s become central to more people’s lives, especially because more people are working from home.

She believes this means people aren’t turning off from work, which could lead to more stress.

“People may need to reinvent new approaches to achieve work-life balance and self-care is going to be needed so much more.”

Finley believes that wellness offers a solution to help people cope with common impacts on wellbeing from the pandemic, in particular because it's specialised to help anxiety and improve sleep and mental wellbeing.

“COVID-19 may be unleashing so much uncertainty, but the need for “more wellness” in our future seems quite certain,” she concluded.

To read the whole interview and hear why Finley firmly believes dance is a crucial wellness practice, visit the GWI website later this week.


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NEWS
GWI Q&A: Canyon Ranch’s Nicola Finley talks inequality and the black community’s concept of wellness
POSTED 12 Aug 2020 . BY Megan Whitby
According to Finley, many people of colour have not felt seen, heard or valued by the wellness industry Credit: GWI
Dr Nicola Finley, doctor and integrative medicine practitioner at Canyon Ranch, Tucson, spoke with GWI’s VP of research and forecasting, Beth McGroarty, for the latest instalment of the PositivelyWell Q&A series.

Finley focused on inequality in wellness for communities, looked at how women of colour are served by the industry and shed more light on the black community’s concept of wellness.

Spa Business has rounded up key points from the interview before the full version is broadcast later this week.

Inequality in wellness
According to Finley, many people of colour have not felt seen, heard or valued by the wellness industry.

They may feel unwelcome in the wellness sector because it’s so homogenous, she says – to the point where the spa and wellness industry has neglected to embrace the large and profitable market represented by black and Latina women.

“Places are more welcoming when everyone is not the same race, age, body type and/or socioeconomic background and there is diversity – in terms of race, gender, body type, age or disability. This really helps,” she said.

Moreover, Finley says that as a black woman, she feels spas don’t generally cater to the needs of diverse communities.

She gives the example of having to bring her own shampoo and conditioner to spas, because what they provide isn’t moisturising enough for her hair. Makeup services also often don’t offer colours that work for her skin tone.

“It’s hard to understand: they want me as a customer, and yet they're not demonstrating that,” she explained.

“These are little things, but little things add up to something big. If companies want to tap into and serve these lucrative markets, we need to take the next step and have people of colour in leadership roles where they’re in a position to make changes and decisions.”

Integrative wellness
Finley proposed that COVID-19 has underlined the need to embrace integrative medicine, because it addresses the whole person – including their body, mind and spirit – which could help address inequality within wellness.

The integrative model holds that a person’s ethnicity, environment, emotions, family structure, and lifestyle (whether access to exercise or healthy food) have a huge impact on their health.

She also believes wellness professionals and doctors should be trained in and practice cultural humility. Meaning they’re not only taught about other cultures, but also how to practice self-reflection and apply a self-critique to their own implicit biases and how that impacts their behaviour.

“Working on cultural humility is crucial in the wellness space because there’s just not enough diversity among providers yet, “ she explains.

“For instance, dieticians and nutritionists are overwhelmingly not from communities of colour. But practitioners can take better care of diverse and vulnerable populations if they practice cultural humility in addition to cultural competency.”

Finley feels that in order to bridge the health/wellness inequality gap, the industry also needs to help educate underserved populations to become health-literate and aware of the importance of prevention.

Different concepts of wellness
In general, she says she has found that communities of colour embrace a more integrative concept of health – not just traditional medicine, but also a greater openness to natural and alternative approaches.

She told McGroarty that black communities’ concept of wellness in particular, very often has ‘spirituality at the centre’.

However, she highlighted that the narrative surrounding wellness needs to change for these communities, in order for them to embrace it.

More people of colour would explore wellness if they didn’t assume it was a luxury, but instead saw it as an important way of taking care of themselves with self-care practices.

COVID-19 and the wellness market
In Finley’s opinion, COVID-19 has made wellness a stronger market and something that’s become central to more people’s lives, especially because more people are working from home.

She believes this means people aren’t turning off from work, which could lead to more stress.

“People may need to reinvent new approaches to achieve work-life balance and self-care is going to be needed so much more.”

Finley believes that wellness offers a solution to help people cope with common impacts on wellbeing from the pandemic, in particular because it's specialised to help anxiety and improve sleep and mental wellbeing.

“COVID-19 may be unleashing so much uncertainty, but the need for “more wellness” in our future seems quite certain,” she concluded.

To read the whole interview and hear why Finley firmly believes dance is a crucial wellness practice, visit the GWI website later this week.
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