Psychiatr
Serv 1996 Mar;47(3):282-6
Race, quality of care, and antipsychotic prescribing practices in psychiatric
emergency services.
Segal SP, Bola JR, Watson MA.
Mental Health and Social Welfare Research Group, University of California,
Berkeley 94720, USA.
OBJECTIVE: The study examined whether the prescription
practices of clinicians in psychiatric emergency services differed for
African-American patients. Prescription of antipsychotic medications and
its relation to quality of care was a particular focus.
METHODS: Data from 442 independently observed evaluations
of patients in psychiatric emergency services were examined using multivariate
analyses. The observations were made during a five-year period at four
urban general hospitals in California.
RESULTS: Clinicians in the four emergency services, most
of whom were Caucasian, prescribed more psychiatric medications to African
Americans than to other patients and devoted significantly less time to
their evaluations. African Americans received more oral doses and more
injections of antipsychotic medications, and the mean 24-hour dosage of
antipsychotics (1,321 milligrams) was significantly higher than for other
patients (825 milligrams). The tendency to overmedicate African-American
patients was lower when clinicians' efforts to engage the patients in
treatment were rated higher.
CONCLUSIONS: The results highlight the importance of
efforts to engage African Americans in the treatment process and the need
for clinical skills and training to help bridge cultural distances.
PMID: 8820552 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]