Background: Research on
racial bias in psychiatric diagnosis has largely been limited to
studies of admission diagnoses assigned to chronically ill
patients. This study tests whether racial bias influences
diagnoses assigned to patients at discharge from their first
psychiatric hospitalization. Methods: In a county-wide sample of
patients with psychosis, hospital diagnoses were compared with
research diagnoses formulated using structured interviews and
strict adherence to DSM-III-R. Symptom patterns were also
examined. Results: Racial
differences were observed in the distribution of both hospital
and research diagnoses. Using research diagnoses as the gold
standard, the sensitivities and specificities of hospital
diagnoses were similar by race (for blacks the sensitivity and
specificity of schizophrenia was 0.33 and 0.91, and for whites,
0.43 and 0.89). The only suggestion of possible bias was that
more blacks were discharged without a definitive diagnosis
(38.7% of blacks vs. 26.3% of whites,
χ2 = 5.80, df = 1, p = 0.02).
Conclusions: We did not
observe the expected racial bias in the assignment of diagnoses
of schizophrenia and affective disorders. While there was
evidence that hospital clinicians had more difficulty diagnosing
black patients, the low concordance between hospital and
research diagnoses for both black and white patients
demonstrates the need to better understand the clinical
diagnostic process for all patients with psychotic disorders at
their first hospitalization.