Title of article
The effect of gender in diagnosing early schizophrenia
Author/Authors
Anne H?ye، نويسنده , , Grigory Rezvy، نويسنده , , Vidje Hansen، نويسنده , , Reidun Olstad، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
7
From page
549
To page
555
Abstract
Background Studies of diagnostic practice
confirm that there is a diagnostic delay in diagnosing
women with schizophrenia compared to
diagnosing men. The aim of the present study was to
investigate the diagnostic practice of Norwegian and
Russian psychiatrists when it comes to early psychosis,
emphasising gender differences. We wanted to
study the association between patient gender as such
and diagnostic decision-making among psychiatrists.
Materials and methods Psychiatrists in Norway and
the Archangels region in Russia were invited to participate
in a study of diagnostic practice, and received
a written case description of a patient with early
psychosis symptoms that could be interpreted as
schizophrenia. They were, however, not informed that
50% of them received a female case description and
50% a male case description. Apart from the patient
being described as ‘‘he’’ or ‘‘she’’ the stories were
identical. Effects of patient gender, clinician gender,
age and main area of interest were estimated using
logistic regression analysis. Results A total of 467
psychiatrists answered the questionnaire. We found
that schizophrenia diagnosis was given significantly
more often to the male case than to the female case.
Our finding remained significant after adjustment for
country, clinician gender, age and main area of
interest, and is unlikely to be explained by known
biases. Conclusion Patient gender in itself affects clinicians’
diagnostic practice regarding schizophrenia,
as schizophrenia diagnosis is given significantly more
often to a male case description than to a female one,
the descriptions being otherwise identical.
Keywords
schizophrenia – gender – diagnosticpractice
Journal title
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Record number
849048
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