The Referral of Minority Adolescents to Community Mental Health Centers

Few investigations have examined the referral of minority adolescents to community mental health clinics. This issue is especially critical in light of the increased attention given to mental health services for children and adolescents in recent years. The present study uses mental health clinic da...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of health and social behavior 1993-06, Vol.34 (2), p.153-164
Hauptverfasser: Takeuchi, David T., Bui, Khanh-Van T., Kim, Lauren
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container_title Journal of health and social behavior
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creator Takeuchi, David T.
Bui, Khanh-Van T.
Kim, Lauren
description Few investigations have examined the referral of minority adolescents to community mental health clinics. This issue is especially critical in light of the increased attention given to mental health services for children and adolescents in recent years. The present study uses mental health clinic data from a large metropolitan area to explore whether African Americans and Mexican Americans entering mental health care do so through referrals that are more coercive than those made for Whites. The total sample consists of 2,460 adolescents aged 13-17; the results indicate that African-American adolescents are more likely than Whites to be referred by an external agency. When types of external agencies are considered, African Americans enter community mental health care more often than Whites through referrals from social agencies; Mexican Americans enter more often than Whites through school referrals. This paper suggests that African-American adolescents' overrepresentation in community mental health clinics may in part be due to their disproportionate contact with social and legal agencies and the propensity of these agencies to rely more often on the mental health system than on families or schools. Among all variables considered in the analyses for this paper, poverty status demonstrated the most consistent and powerful association with coercive referrals.
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This issue is especially critical in light of the increased attention given to mental health services for children and adolescents in recent years. The present study uses mental health clinic data from a large metropolitan area to explore whether African Americans and Mexican Americans entering mental health care do so through referrals that are more coercive than those made for Whites. The total sample consists of 2,460 adolescents aged 13-17; the results indicate that African-American adolescents are more likely than Whites to be referred by an external agency. When types of external agencies are considered, African Americans enter community mental health care more often than Whites through referrals from social agencies; Mexican Americans enter more often than Whites through school referrals. 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This issue is especially critical in light of the increased attention given to mental health services for children and adolescents in recent years. The present study uses mental health clinic data from a large metropolitan area to explore whether African Americans and Mexican Americans entering mental health care do so through referrals that are more coercive than those made for Whites. The total sample consists of 2,460 adolescents aged 13-17; the results indicate that African-American adolescents are more likely than Whites to be referred by an external agency. When types of external agencies are considered, African Americans enter community mental health care more often than Whites through referrals from social agencies; Mexican Americans enter more often than Whites through school referrals. 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This issue is especially critical in light of the increased attention given to mental health services for children and adolescents in recent years. The present study uses mental health clinic data from a large metropolitan area to explore whether African Americans and Mexican Americans entering mental health care do so through referrals that are more coercive than those made for Whites. The total sample consists of 2,460 adolescents aged 13-17; the results indicate that African-American adolescents are more likely than Whites to be referred by an external agency. When types of external agencies are considered, African Americans enter community mental health care more often than Whites through referrals from social agencies; Mexican Americans enter more often than Whites through school referrals. This paper suggests that African-American adolescents' overrepresentation in community mental health clinics may in part be due to their disproportionate contact with social and legal agencies and the propensity of these agencies to rely more often on the mental health system than on families or schools. Among all variables considered in the analyses for this paper, poverty status demonstrated the most consistent and powerful association with coercive referrals.</abstract><cop>Washington, DC</cop><pub>American Sociological Association</pub><pmid>8277127</pmid><doi>10.2307/2137241</doi><tpages>12</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescents
African Americans
African Americans - statistics & numerical data
Biological and medical sciences
Black communities
Black people
Community Mental Health Centers
Community Mental Health Centers - utilization
Community mental health services
Community Relations
Ethnic groups
Female
Health care
Health services
Health Services Research
Hispanic Americans
Humans
Logistic Models
Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Male
Medical referrals
Medical sciences
Mental health
Mental Health Programs
Mental health services
Metropolitan areas
Mexican Americans
Mexican Americans - statistics & numerical data
Minority & ethnic groups
Minority Groups
Minority Groups - statistics & numerical data
Poverty
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Referral
Referral and Consultation - statistics & numerical data
Referrals
School Health Services - statistics & numerical data
Schools
Social Agencies
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
Social research
Social Work - statistics & numerical data
Teenagers
USA
Whites
title The Referral of Minority Adolescents to Community Mental Health Centers
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