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Helen Minnis a Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry,
Yorkhill NHS Trust, Glasgow G3 8SJ, b Bethlem and Maudsley NHS
Trust, London SE5 8AL Correspondence to: S Smith sphasms{at}iop.kcl.ac.uk
Ten years ago, psychiatrists rated black male patients as
potentially more violent than white patients.1 We aimed to
establish whether such racial stereotyping still occurs.
We sent a postal questionnaire concerning the first presentation
of a young man at casualty
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Participants, methods, and results
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Participants, methods, and...
Comment
References
which included a photograph, brief history,
and findings on the patient's mental state
to a random sample
(generated by SPSS statistical software) of 1000 British psychiatrists
obtained from the Royal College of Psychiatrists' database. The sample
was randomised so that half received a picture of a black man and half
received a picture of a white man. (Photographs were of one of four
healthy volunteers, whom we had not seen previously; they were matched
for age and occupation, and photographed under identical conditions.)
To exclude the possibility that results stemmed from differences
between individual photographs, such as facial expression and mode of
dress, we photographed two men from each race; one was a footballer and
the other an academic (the photographs can be seen on
BMJ 's website). We used recommended terminology
for ethnicity.2 Respondents were asked to rank five
questions, in order of importance, to supplement the assessment.
2 tests compared "black" with "white"
questionnaires after questions were grouped into "important"
(ranking 1-2) and "less important" (ranking 3-5). Respondents rated
questions on management issues by putting a cross on a 10 cm continuous
line. For each question, mean scores for "black" and "white"
questionnaires were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test
(table).
Of the 823 psychiatrists who could be contacted (18% had changed
address or retired), 59% (n=485)
equivalent to 10% of British psychiatrists
returned completed questionnaires. Forty eight per cent
(232) had received a "black" questionnaire. Fourteen respondents, who had all received a questionnaire with a photograph of a black man,
guessed the hypothesis; six completed the questionnaire and were
included in the analyses. Five others returned questionnaires uncompleted. Prior power calculations, based on expected mean (SD)
risks of violence of 2.41 (1.76) v 2.87 (1.53),1 gave the study 85% power at the 5% level.
Psychiatrists indicated that they were more likely to ask black
patients whether they had a social worker or had received learning
support at school, whereas they were more likely to ask white patients
about problem drinking. They were equally likely to ask a black patient
or a white patient if they had a criminal record or had recently used
illegal drugs. Psychiatrists thought it would be more difficult to
build a rapport with white patients, that white patients would be more
of a management problem, and that they were more likely to pose a risk
of violence to others. There were no significant differences regarding
risk to self, the need for inpatient care, or the need for a locked
ward. Psychiatrists were more likely to rate schizophrenia and
personality disorder as appropriate diagnoses for white patients, but
there were no differences for bipolar illness or brief reactive
psychosis (table). There were no significant differences in any of the
above variables between patients of the same race.
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Comment |
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Participating psychiatrists did not rate black patients as more
likely to be violent than white; this is different from a decade
ago.1 Did psychiatrists guess the hypothesis and
overcompensate? Only 1% suggested that they had overcompensated (none
with a "white" questionnaire); in addition, ranking of
supplementary questions in which psychiatrists with "black"
photographs were more likely to ask about social work or learning
support suggested that racial stereotyping was occurring. Differences
in management strategies were small and may not be clinically
important. Racism is evident in the psychiatric system: involuntary
admissions of young black men are more common than those of young white
men,
3 4
and schizophrenia is more commonly diagnosed in
young black men4 even though the prevalence in the
community is no different for black and white men.5 Our
results suggest that the racial stereotyping that occurs at first
interview is not sufficient to account for the inequalities seen in
secondary care. Urgent exploration is required to find out where these
inequalities arise.
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Acknowledgments |
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We are grateful to the Nuffield Foundation, the participants, the photographic volunteers, Lisa Cunningham and Reuben Millward for help with data collection, David Young for statistical advice, Stephen Keplinger for questionnaire design, and Peter Lynn and Glyn Lewis for advice on study design.
Contributors: HM initiated core ideas and participated in developing the protocol, supervising AM, and writing the paper. AM discussed core ideas, completed the literature search, administered data collection, analysed the data, and participated in writing the paper. MG discussed core ideas and participated in developing the protocol, supervising AM, and writing the paper. SS discussed core ideas and participated in developing the protocol and writing the paper. HM is the guarantor.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: Nuffield Foundation.
Competing interests: None declared.
Photographs that accompanied the
questionnaire can be seen on the BMJ's website
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References |
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| 1. |
Lewis G, Croft-Jeffreys C, David A.
Are British psychiatrists racist?
Br J Psychiatry
1990;
157:
410-415 |
| 2. |
McKenzie K, Crowcroft NS.
Describing race, ethnicity, and culture in medical research.
BMJ
1996;
312:
1054-1056 |
| 3. |
Davies S, Thornicroft G, Leese M, Higgingbotham A, Phelan M.
Ethnic differences in risk of compulsory psychiatric admission among representative cases of psychosis in London.
BMJ
1996;
312:
533-537 |
| 4. |
Koffman J, Fulop NJ, Pashley D, Coleman K.
Ethnicity and use of acute psychiatric beds: one-day survey in North and South Thames regions.
Br J Psychiatry
1997;
171:
238-241 |
| 5. | Nazroo JY. Ethnicity and mental health: findings from a community survey. London: Policy Studies Institute, 1997. |
(Accepted 17 May 2001)
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