Diagnosis = the identification of
the nature of an illness / problem
by examination of the symptoms
Culture Bias
appears to be a major bias in diagnosis
with regards to people of African
descent, particularly with schizophrenia
Cochrane and Sashidharan (1995) -
Afro-Caribbean immigrants in the UK
are 7x more likely to be diagnosed with
schizophrenia than white people
however, doesn't give us any info about the
nature of this bias; is there a bias in the
diagnosing, or is there a genuine difference
over-diagnosis
bias is the
diagnostic tools used
the diagnostic tool is culturally biased
may overemphasise a western
concept of ideal mental health
1. things that may be classed as symptoms of mental
illness in one culture, may be regarded as normal in
other cultures; leading to over-diagnosis of disorders
Ebigno (1986) -
symptoms of depression
vary from culture to
culture. In Nigeria,
people often complain of
burning sensations in
the body and crawling
sensations in the head
2. could lead to
ignoring some
genuine mental
illnesses which
don't occur in
Western culture
Koro = extreme anxiety that the
penis will recede into the body, and
Ghost Sickness = excessive focus on
death
bias in the person who
is doing the diagnosis
Lewis (1990) - 139 psychiatrists were
shown an individual written case history;
asked to make a judgement on the
treatment and predict whether criminal
proceedings should take place; some
were told it was a black patient, others
were told it was white
found that the black patient was recommended drug
treatment and was seen as a more violent criminal;
suggests that mental health professionals can be
biased in their judgement by social stereotypes
however, psychiatrists may
have diagnosed patients in ways
that we didn't know about before
the experiments took place
genuine differences
stress of being a
minority / immigrant
stress associated with being an ethnic
minority leads to higher stress levels;
could trigger off a mental illness
immigrants generally are of a lower social
class, and have to adapt to living in a foreign
culture, and may lack communication skills
however, the majority of immigrants to
the UK in recent history have been
white, yet the bias in diagnosis only
applies to black immigrants
rates of serious mental illnesses are
higher in British-born black people rather
than their parents, or recent immigrants
however, this is because
they have no home as they
have mixed cultures
genetic factors
people of African descent may have a
genetic vulnerability to developing
certain types of mental illness
however, Nazroo (1997)
found there is not more black
people with schizophrenia
Gender Bias
Walker (1994) - women with
depression outnumber men
between 2 and 6 times
however, no gender bias
for the occurrence of
bi-polar or schizophrenia
this gender bias
is quite recent
Cochrane (1995) argues that
earlier in the 19th century, men
were much more likely to be
admitted to hospital than women
these statistics don't give
us the cause of the bias
over-diagnosis
Worell & Remer (1992) - 4 possible
reasons why there may be gender bias
1. disregarding
environmental context
focus in diagnosis is on the
symptoms rather than the
individual circumstances
female patients have to cope with
more difficult circumstances
2. differential diagnosis
on the basis on gender
a patients's symptoms may
be interpreted differently
depending on their gender
therapists exaggerate the number of
men and women with disorders which
conform to the gender stereotype
3. therapist
misjudgement
sex role stereotyping may increase the
chances that the therapist will detect
symptoms of submissiveness in females
and aggressiveness in males
Broverman (1981) supports the existence
of gender stereotypes after health care
professionals used similar words when
describing a mentally healthy adult, a
healthy male, and a healthy female
4. theoretical
orientation
therapist's theoretical
biases may distort the
process of diagnosis
genuine differences
cause of the high level of depression in women is
hormones; the hormones fluctuate during the
month, as well as childbirth and this may possibly
explain why women are more prone to depression
however, Weissman (1977) - whilst there
is some evidence of hormone contribution,
it cannot completely account for the
differences between men and women