Patient
Educ Couns 1998 Jul;34(3):227-38
Patient race and psychotropic prescribing during medical encounters.
Sleath B, Svarstad B, Roter D.
University of North Carolina, School of Pharmacy, Chapel Hill, USA.
This paper examines how patient race, rating of physical and emotional
health, expression of physical, emotional, and social problem symptoms,
and physician perceptions of patients' physical health, emotional health,
and social problems influence psychotropic prescribing in patients with
chronic illness. Data were collected at 11 geographic areas in the United
States and Canada. Patient visits were audio-tape recorded and research
assistants interviewed each patient after their medical visit. Physicians
completed self-administered questionnaires after each visit with a participating
patient. Whites were significantly more likely to receive psychotropic
prescriptions than non-whites (P < 0.05). Twenty percent of white and
13.5% of black patients received prescriptions for one or more psychotropic
medications. Logistic regression techniques were used to predict psychotropic
prescribing to white and non-white patients respectively. Patient expression
of emotional symptoms and physician perceptions of patient emotional health
significantly influenced psychotropic prescribing to white patients, whereas
only patient expression of emotional symptoms significantly influenced
psychotropic prescribing to non-white patients. Patient expression of
physical and social problem symptoms and physician perceptions of patient
physical health and social problems did not influence psychotropic prescribing
to white or non-white patients. The paper emphasizes the importance of
training primary care physicians to probe and to provide patients with
an opportunity to discuss their emotional symptoms.
PMID: 9791526 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]