Inconsistencies in diagnosis and symptoms among bilingual and english-speaking Latinos and Euro-Americans Article

Díaz, E, Miskemen, T, Vega, WA et al. (2009). Inconsistencies in diagnosis and symptoms among bilingual and english-speaking Latinos and Euro-Americans . PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 60(10), 1379-1382. 10.1176/ps.2009.60.10.1379

cited authors

  • Díaz, E; Miskemen, T; Vega, WA; Gara, M; Wilson, DR; Lesser, I; Escamilla, M; Neighbors, HW; Arndt, S; Strakowski, S

authors

abstract

  • Objective: Little information is available about accuracy of diagnoses in clinical care for affective and other major mental disorders experienced by Latino patients. This study addressed two central research questions: Do Latinos have disproportionate rates of clinical diagnoses of major depression based on structured diagnostic interviews? Are diagnostic patterns consistent with patient profiles and medical record information? Methods: A total of 259 bilingual Latino, monolingual English-speaking Latino, and Euro-American patients aged 18 to 45 years with a history of severe depression or psychotic symptoms were compared across three clinical sites by using structured interviews. Results: Compared with Euro-Americans, bilingual Latinos had significantly higher rates of major depression and significantly lower levels of mania. No significant differences were found between monolingual English-speaking Latinos and Euro-Americans. Conclusions: Results suggest that the diagnostic process is affected by an apparent association with cultural-linguistic influences, notably speaking English as a second language.

publication date

  • January 1, 2009

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 1379

end page

  • 1382

volume

  • 60

issue

  • 10