A 1999 report found that 44,000-98,000 Americans die
annually due to medical errors. Most of
these occurred in hospital settings. Multiple
studies found that autopsied patients who died in the hospital and found that
up to 47% of the time, they were misdiagnosed.
In medical intensive care patients, in 26% of cases, the cause of death
was missed as a clinical diagnosis. In
almost all of those cases, accurate diagnosis would have resulted in a change
in treatment and prolonged survival.
Radiology results were found to be significantly error
prone. They failed to detected
abnormalities 25-32% of the time and yielded an incorrect diagnosis about 2% of
the time. These statistics have been
replicated numerous times. 80% of errors
are perceptual, in which the abnormality is present but not noticed by the
radiologist. Even when using one, very
experienced radiologist for all radiology reporting, the error rate was 25-30%.
Often, a physical disease is diagnosed as psychiatric. This occurs 41-83% of the time, depending on
which study is used as reference. This
occurs disproportionately to women, regardless of race. This is probably because women seek therapy
far more frequently than men. It is also
possible that this occurrence is the reason why women are said to have much
higher rates of depression, anxiety and somatization disorders.
Women continue to be subjected to subtle sexist
discrimination. Disorders that cause
depression, anxiety, somatization, anorexia, hysteria, histrionic personality
or dissocation are far more likely to be diagnosed in women as psychiatric,
regardless of whether or not there is an underlying physical cause. Depression is thought to be diagnosed
incorrectly in women 30-50% of the time.
About 70% of prescriptions for antidepressants are given to women, many
without proper diagnosis or monitoring.
This is especially problematic as depression is expected to be the
leading cause of disability and second largest killer after heart disease by
2020.
There are hundreds of physical diseases that cause
psychiatric symptoms, including mast cell disease. Hyperthyroidism is a good example. Hyperthyroidism can cause incessant tension,
restlessness, agitation, inability to relax, flight of ideas, insomnia,
excitability, irritability, emotional lability and severe, chronic
anxiety. Patients with hyperthyroidism
are often misdiagnosed as having bipolar disorder, despite also having
diarrhea, puffy red eyes, and increased appetite with accompanying weight
loss. Medications for bipolar disorder
exacerbate hyperthyroidism, and some patients are only diagnosed correctly
after years of spiraling.
People of color have particular reasons to distrust the
medical community. There is a long and
graphic history of people of color being victimized in the name of research,
eugenics, and “public health.” There are
confirmed reports of African-American, Chicana and Asian-American women being
sterilized under the guise of another medically necessary surgery. It is estimated that from 1938-1968, 1/3 of
Puerto Rican women of childbearing age were sterilized. The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, while
likely the most famous abuse of people of color by the medical establishment, is only one example of
many.
There is also a well-established positive correlation
between racism and overdiagnosis of serious disorders and underdiagnosis of
less serious ones. There is some indication
that this phenomenon also extends into interactions with the LGBTQ
community. Latinos, African-Americans
and Asian Americans are more likely to feel disrespected by medical
professionals by whites. 18% Latinos,
16% African-Americans and 13% Asian Americans feel disrespected because of
their inability to pay or speak English.
32% Latinos, 25% Asian Americans and 23% African-Americans said they had
problems understanding their doctor and felt they could not ask questions,
compared to 15% of whites. 15%
African-Americans, 13% Latinos, 11% Asian Americans felt they would receive
better healthcare if they were of another race, compared to only 1% of whites.
Misdiagnosis continues to be a problem in the US. Discrimination on the part of providers leading to
misdiagnosis is a well established phenomenon. This disproportionately affects women and racial/ethnic
minorities.
References:
Singh, H, et al. 2013. The frequency of diagnostic errors in
outpatient care: estimations from three large observational studies involving US
adult populations. BMJ Qual Saf.
Scarborough, Norman. 2008. Medical misdiagnosis in America.
Hollar MC. The Impact of Racism on the
Delivery of Health Care and Mental Health Services. Psychiatr Q. 2001;72:337-345.
Suite, Derek, et al. 2007. Beyond misdiagnosis, misunderstanding and
mistrust: Relevance of the historical perspective in the medical and mental
health treatment of people of color.
Jour Nat Med Assc. 2007: 99,
879-885.
Klonoff, Elizabeth, Landrine, Hope. Clinical Medicine, Preventing Misdiagnosis of
Women. 1997.
Also, of mention and the disrespect and the "looking down upon" by medical professionals of those that are overweight. 2 out of 10 people are overweight...and I am a nurse and have been looked down upon by doctors...no compassion...and they blame my AS symptoms on weight. argh! frustrating. Sensitivity training is badly needed.
ReplyDeleteYou are 100% right. I apologize for not mentioning that, it is a very real form of discrimination.
ReplyDelete