Jl. Mcnulty et al., COMPARATIVE VALIDITY OF MMPI-2 SCORES OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND CAUCASIAN MENTAL-HEALTH-CENTER CLIENTS, Psychological assessment, 9(4), 1997, pp. 464-470
The comparative validity of Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventor
y-2 (MMPI-2) scores for African American (n = 123) and Caucasian (n =
561) clients from a community mental health center was investigated by
contrasting mean MMPI-2 scores and correlations between those scores
and conceptually related therapist rating scales for the 2 groups. The
African American men scored significantly higher on the Lie scale and
Fears content scale than did their Caucasian counterparts, and the Af
rican American women scored higher than Caucasian women on Hypomania.
Caucasian women scored higher on the Low Self Esteem content scale. Co
rrelations between MMPI-2 scores and patient description form ratings
were not significantly different between racial groups, indicating tha
t the differences in MMPI-2 mean scale score elevations reflect actual
differences in client psychopathology. There was no evidence of test
bias in the current study. Suggestions are made for additional researc
h.