NHSE Allyship Repository

Mentoring for Black and Minoritized Allied Health Professionals in Health and Social Care: A Scoping Review (Educator / Leader)

Not yet rated

Introduction:Diversity, equality and belonging are important aspects within Allied Health Professional (AHP) groups. Mentoring is considered as a solution to improve career progression. To date, there is no consensus on what good mentoring looks like and whether current models are fit for purpose for Black and Minoritised Ethnicity AHPs.


Methods:Scoping review to understand mentoring among Black and Minoritised Ethnicity (BME) AHPs through searches in four electronic databases using pre-defined criteria.


Results:From 1440 studies screened, 2 studies were included in this review that researched mentoring for BME AHPs in a health and/or social care setting. Themes that emerged from the literature were related to access and amount of mentoring for BME AHPs, psychosocial mentoring may influence cross-race mentorship outcomes and organisational issues related to workforce pressures and management support. There is uncertainty around the importance of same race relationships in mentoring but there is some evidence that within cross-race mentoring this could influence outcomes.


Conclusion:It is unknown if mentoring enables career success in BME AHPs. There is emerging evidence on the importance of psychosocial mentoring within cross-race relationships. Careful reflection and further research is needed on how current mentoring models work and ensure fair access to mentorship and support for BME AHPs.

Additional information

Journal article (2023) Mentoring for Black and Minoritized Allied Health Professionals in Health and Social Care: A Scoping Review by Anita Atwal, Vimal Sriram, Elizabeth A McKay

Resource details

Provider's catalogue badge
Contributed by: NHSE Allyship Repository
Authored by: Anita Atwal, London South Banking University, School of Allied and Community Health, London, UK
Vimal Sriram, University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Ft and NIHR Applied Research Collaboration
Elizabeth A McKay4, Edinburgh Napier University
Licence: More information on licences
First contributed: 09 June 2025
Audience access level: General user

Ratings

0 ratings

Not yet rated
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%
Report an issue with this resource

You may report a resource, for example, if there is an issue with copyright infringement, breach of personal data, factual inaccuracies, typing errors or safety concerns. The type of issue will determine whether the resource is immediately removed from the platform or if the contributor is asked to make amendments. You can report a resource from the resource information page or by contacting the Learning Hub support team.

You can contact the Learning Hub support team by completing the support form or if you have a general enquiry you can email enquiries@learninghub.nhs.uk.