Publication | Closed Access
The influence of race and ethnicity on psychiatric diagnoses and clinical characteristics of children and adolescents in children's services.
116
Citations
32
References
2007
Year
EthnicityPsychiatric DisordersAdolescent Behavioral HealthEducationMental Health InterventionMental HealthChild Mental HealthRaceNative Hawaiian YouthRacial GroupYouth Mental HealthClinical CharacteristicsMinority StressEthnic DiscriminationTeen Mental HealthPsychiatryPsychiatric DiagnosesChildren's Mental HealthCommunity Mental HealthPediatricsCultural PsychiatryWhite YouthMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
This study examined the influence of race and ethnicity on psychiatric diagnoses and clinical characteristics of 1,189 children and adolescents participating in the federally funded Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and Their Families Program. Results showed that after controlling for age, gender, functional impairment, and socioeconomic status, there were significant race and ethnicity effects on diagnosis and clinical characteristics. Black and Native Hawaiian youth were more likely than White youth to be diagnosed with disruptive behavioral disorders. Hispanic and Native Hawaiian youth were less likely than White youth to be diagnosed with depression or dysthymia. Black, Asian American, and Native Hawaiian youth were rated as exhibiting less internalizing behavior problems than White youth. Implications for research, practice, and policy are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1