Reducing biases in diagnosis


I want help describing how the client's cultural identity in the case below could have contributed toward the personal biases and diagnosis and how a clinician might mitigate, or decrease, the appearance of personal biases in diagnosis.

The case:

Marvin, a 45 year-old African American male, has come to your office because of feelings of anger regarding his recent firing as a mid-level corporate executive. He held this position for 15 years; however was ostensibly let go as part of a larger organizational restructuring. Marvin shared with you; though, that he is skeptical of this description because he has had some incidents where co-workers were overheard making different racially-charged epithets toward different employees. He noted that the "biggest racist of them all" became his direct supervisor two years ago, and shortly after he received the first of two disciplinary reports. As he mentioned, he had never experienced problems with work prior to such reports; as a result, these reports were "bogus complaints" and upset him.

Marvin is quite animated and communicates his anger regarding what has happened very clearly to you. He notes that this is not the type of thing that would bring him to a therapist's office - "I'm not crazy!" Instead, he came in to placate his wife. She complains that Marvin is not just angry and unkind toward her and the children, however that he sits around all day and has no interest in much of anything except video games. Marvin's wife, who attended the first part of this session, noted that they have not had sex in three months, he has stopped going to the gym (something he did daily), and he seems "very pessimistic" regarding this poor mark on his record. She noted that while Marvin has always had some of these tendencies, they have gotten significantly worse since he was let go from his job.

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Other Subject: Reducing biases in diagnosis
Reference No:- TGS029699

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