Soc
Sci Med 1992 Jan;34(2):141-9
Psychiatric diagnosis and racial bias: empirical and interpretative approaches.
Littlewood R.
Department of Anthropology, University College London, U.K.
Understanding of psychiatric illness among Britain's Black and ethnic
minority population has shifted from an emphasis on cultural difference
to one on racism within psychiatric theory and practice. In spite of this
apparent turn, the explanations put forward remain within an empirical
framework of methodological individualism, reflecting the background and
training of British psychiatrists themselves. How racism may be actually
demonstrated in individual clinical practice remains elusive. The standard
hypotheses are examined here through a conventional clinical vignette
study: this suggests medical education does not in itself now involve
any specific racist psychiatric assumptions. Fuller understanding of the
exercise of social power within this particular domain requires not only
more complex interactive studies, preferably derived from a variety of
clinical and social contexts, but a more developed interpretation of psychiatric
practice and ideology within the social system.
PMID: 1738867 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]