The numbers are alarming. In 2025, Black women experienced a net loss of more than 300,000 jobs, a figure that has prompted urgent conversations not just about economic recovery but about the psychological weight that kind of upheaval carries. Job loss for anyone is destabilizing. For Black women who have long been told that education and hard work are the surest paths to security losing that professional footing can trigger something far deeper than financial stress.
Mental health professionals are paying close attention, and what they are seeing demands a broader public response.
The trauma of job loss goes beyond finances
Dr. LaNail R. Plummer, a mental health advocate and founder of Onyx Therapy Group, has made culturally responsive care for marginalized communities a cornerstone of her practice. In the wake of widespread job losses, she has been actively assessing Black women for Acute Stress Disorder, a condition that can emerge in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic experience and presents with severe anxiety, flashbacks and emotional detachment.
What makes this moment particularly critical, according to Dr. Plummer, is the narrow but meaningful window that exists between acute stress and long-term trauma. When a person receives therapeutic support within the first six months of a traumatic event, the likelihood of developing Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder decreases significantly. Catching women in that window before the stress calcifies into something more chronic is exactly what her current work is focused on.
The connection between professional identity and personal identity is especially pronounced for Black women, who have historically been conditioned to anchor their sense of self-worth in their career achievements. When a job disappears, it does not just disrupt income. It can shatter a carefully constructed sense of who a person is and what they have earned.
Warning signs that deserve attention
Recognizing when grief over job loss has shifted into something requiring professional support is not always straightforward. Dr. Plummer points to several patterns worth monitoring closely.
A noticeable withdrawal from everyday life pulling back from social connections, losing interest in activities that previously brought pleasure, sleeping more than usual or eating differently can signal that something more serious is developing beneath the surface. Persistent fixation on perceived injustices or setbacks is another indicator, particularly when those thoughts become intrusive and begin to dominate daily thinking. Perhaps most telling is a shift in self-talk: language rooted in hopelessness or sweeping distrust, the kind that suggests a person has begun to internalize their circumstances as permanent rather than situational.
Dr. Plummer is careful to note that an initial emotional reaction to job loss is entirely natural and expected. The concern arises when those feelings do not lift when what should be a temporary response settles into something heavier and longer-lasting.
What supportive workplaces actually look like
Addressing the mental health needs of Black women cannot stop at the therapist’s office. Dr. Plummer, who authored The Essential Guide for Counseling Black Women, argues that the environments where Black women work or hope to return to work must also evolve. Her framework for a psychologically safe workplace centers on four elements: inclusion, learning, contributing and challenging. Each one represents an opportunity for employers to actively affirm the value of Black employees rather than passively tolerating their presence.
The absence of this kind of environment has real consequences. Many corporate workplaces are structured in ways that conflict with the communal values central to Black culture, and that friction generates a particular kind of chronic stress that compounds everything else a person may already be carrying.
Practical steps for protecting mental health right now
While systemic change takes time, there are immediate actions that can help. Dr. Plummer recommends maintaining a daily routine as an anchor during a period of uncertainty, staying engaged with hobbies and creative outlets, eating consistently and well, and being intentional about limiting time on social media, which can intensify feelings of inadequacy or isolation.
The broader takeaway from Dr. Plummer’s work is straightforward: people perform better, recover faster and contribute more when they feel genuinely safe and valued not when they feel surveilled or expendable. That insight applies to workplaces, to therapy rooms and to the communities where Black women are trying, against considerable odds, to rebuild.

