By De'Laney Rowland, BlackDoctor.org Staff Writer
New research finds that minority children and adolescents who visit the pediatric emergency department more often receive diagnoses of severe mental health disorders than their white peers."Diagnostic decisions may have a significant influence on the course of one's mental health care. Emergency services is in a critical position as it is often the point of entry into the mental health system for many people," said Jordana Muroff, Ph.D., the study's lead author.
Muroff, a social worker, psychologist and assistant professor at Boston University, and colleagues examined a year's worth of medical records from an urban pediatric psychiatric emergency department.
The findings, which included 2,991 patients under age 22, are in the May-June issue of the journal General Hospital Psychiatry.The study found significant differences in the diagnosis of mental health disorders, depending on racial or ethnic group.
For example, 4.5 percent of African-American and 4.9 percent of Hispanic/Latino children and teens received diagnoses of psychotic disorder, compared with only 2.5 percent of white children and teens.
Diagnoses of behavioral problems, such as hyperactivity, impulsivity, argumentativeness, lying and making threats to harm others, were also more frequent in African-American and Hispanic/Latino youth - 50.3 percent and 46.4 percent of these patients received a behavioral disorder diagnosis, respectively. Only 34.9 percent of white children and teens received this diagnosis.
On the other hand, 37.8 percent of white children and teens received depressive disorder diagnoses, compared with 28.5 percent of African-American and 30.1 percent of Hispanic/Latino youth. Diagnoses of bipolar disorder and alcohol or substance abuse also were more common in white children and teens.
Muroff said that the limited epidemiological data from the general population does not show significant racial differences in the rates of psychotic disorders or bipolar disorders among youth.
Because the study was retrospective, "we can't really say for sure whether these diagnoses were accurate and what is the exact the reason behind these differences," Muroff said. "However, these patterns highlight that race/ethnicity seems to be associated with specific clinical decisions. We have seen such patterns with adults and there is growing evidence of these disparities among youth," Muroff said.
However, the higher incidence of more severe psychiatric problems in minority kids and teens "may reflect true differences in who seeks patterns of care. Nonwhite people may seek formal psychiatric services only after there is a substantial deterioration," Muroff said.
The author said that these findings also might indicate diagnostic errors, stereotypes and bias or potential differences across cultures in how people express psychiatric symptoms or stress.
"The findings really speak to the issue that disparities are real," said Portia Cole, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the School of Social Work at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond.
The racial disparities in diagnosis and decision-making in this setting indicate a need for health care providers to respect cultural differences, understand the stigma that certain diagnoses carry within specific communities and to work to improve patient-provider communication, Cole said.
In addition, "minority families who have children and adolescents should ensure that there is some accuracy and oversight in terms of questioning the diagnosis," she said.
Pictures of the Week
A local man throws rocks at South African police in the Reiger Park informal settlement outside Johannesburg Monday May 19, 2008. Mobs rampaged through poor suburbs of Johannesburg in a frenzy of anti-foreigner violence over the weekend, killing at least 12 people, injuring dozens and forcing hundreds to seek refuge at police stations. The attacks capped a week of mounting violence that started in the sprawling township of Alexandra. Angry residents there accused foreigners, many of them Zimbabweans who fled their own country's economic collapse, of taking scarce jobs and housing. . (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
An unidentified woman looks through the shattered rear window of the car after it was hit by bricks outside a church in Johannesburg, South Africa, Sunday May 18, 2008. Mobs killed at least five people and injured 50 in anti-foreigner violence Sunday that has spread through poor suburbs of Johannesburg, police said. Foreigners, mainly Zimbabweans, were targeted, police spokeswoman Cheryl Engelbrecht said. More than 300 had sought refuge at the local police station, she said. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
Women from the Pro-independence Polisario Front rebel soldiers are seen during a military parade in the Western Sahara village of Tifariti, Tuesday May 19, 2008 to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Polisario Army. After Spanish colonizers left Western Sahara in 1975, Morocco and Mauritania went to war over it. By 1979, Mauritania had pulled out and Morocco had taken over. But fighting continued between 15,000 Saharaui's Polisario guerrillas and Morocco's U.S. equipped army. A U.N. negotiated truce in 1991 called for a referendum on the region's future, but that vote never happened. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
An unidentified man buys cooking oil on the streets of Highfileds in Harare, Zimbabwe Tuesday, May, 20, 2008. The cooking oil is made affordable by repackaging into smaller bottles and containers. A third of the population has fled Zimbabwe in recent years as the country confronts chronic shortages of food, medicine, fuel and cash precipitated by the government's seizure of white-owned farms that once produced enough to feed the country and export to neighbors. The government this month introduced a half-billion Zimbabwe dollar note in efforts to deal with runaway inflation that unofficial estimates put at 700,000 percent a year. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi)
Sen. Barack Takes a break on the campaign trail before giving a speech. (AP)
Actor Shia LaBeouf and a fan take a self portrait at the premiere of his new movie "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull",Tuesday, May 20, 2008, in New York. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano)
GRESHAM, OR - MAY 18: Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) is hugged by his wife Michelle Obama before he speaks during a campaign event at the Huntington Terrace Senior Center May 18, 2008 in Gresham, Oregon. Obama is campaigning through Oregon and Kentucky ahead of Tuesday's primaries. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan holds the ball near the start of the Game 7 of the NBA Western Conference semifinal basketball series against the New Orleans Hornets, Monday, May 19, 2008, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
