Title of article :
Ethnic Differences in Perceived Impairment and Need
for Care
Author/Authors :
Ligia M. Chavez، نويسنده , , Patrick E. Shrout &
Margarita Alegr?a، نويسنده , , Sheri Lapatin، نويسنده , , Glorisa Canino، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
Latino children in the U.S. have high rates of
unmet need for mental health services, perhaps due to
biased perceptions of impairment and need for care by
parents and providers. We tested this argument using an
experimental vignette design. Vignettes described children
with problems that varied on severity (mild vs. serious),
nature of the problem (internalizing vs. externalizing), as
well as gender and ethnicity (Latino vs. Anglo). Raters
were Latino and Anglo parents (N=185) and providers (N=
189). Vignettes with Latino names were viewed as more
impaired by both parents and providers, and this effect was
significantly stronger in Latino vignettes with less severe
problems. Severity and Latino features of vignettes also
interacted with judgments of need for service. At higher
severity, vignettes with Anglo names were judged to need
service more than vignettes with Latino names, despite the
same judged levels of impairment. Results are discussed in
the light of the unmet need for Latinos.
Keywords :
Vignette methodology . Ethnicity research .Mental health services . Impairment
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology