School of Psychology, University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.
Med Educ. 2010 Dec;44(12):1241-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2010.03769.x. Epub 2010 Nov 11.
Bias against foreign-born or -trained medical students and doctors is not well understood, despite its documented impact on recruitment, integration and retention. This research experimentally examines the interaction of location of medical education and nationality in evaluations of doctors' competence and trustworthiness.
A convenience sample of prospective patients evaluated fictitious candidates for a position as a doctor in community practice at a new local health clinic. All applicants were described as having the same personality profile, legal qualifications to practise, a multi-degree education and relevant work experience. The location of medical education (the candidate's home country or the UK) and national background (Australia or Pakistan) of the applicants were independently experimentally manipulated.
Consistent with previous research on skills discounting and bias, foreign-born candidates were evaluated less favourably than native-born candidates, despite their comparable education level, work experience and personality. However, overseas medical education obtained in the First World both boosted evaluations (of competence and trustworthiness) and attenuated bias based on nationality.
The present findings demonstrate the selective discounting of foreign-born doctors' credentials. The data show an interaction of location of medical education and birth nationality in bias against foreign doctors. On an applied level, the data document that the benefits of medical education obtained in the First World can extend beyond its direct outcomes (high-quality training and institutional recognition) to the indirect benefit of the attenuation of patient bias based on nationality.
尽管有文件证明对外籍或在国外接受培训的医学生和医生的偏见会对招聘、融入和留用产生影响,但人们对这种偏见的理解还很有限。本研究通过实验检验了医学教育地点和国籍在评估医生能力和可信度方面的相互作用。
本研究采用方便抽样法,选取了一些潜在的患者,对他们进行了评估,评估对象是在新的社区诊所担任医生的虚构候选人。所有申请人都被描述为具有相同的个性特征、法律行医资格、多学位教育背景和相关工作经验。申请人的医学教育地点(候选人的原籍国或英国)和国籍(澳大利亚或巴基斯坦)是独立进行实验操纵的。
与技能折扣和偏见的先前研究一致,尽管外国出生的候选人在教育水平、工作经验和个性方面与本地出生的候选人相当,但他们的评价却较低。然而,在第一世界国家获得的海外医学教育既提高了(对能力和可信度的)评价,又减轻了基于国籍的偏见。
本研究结果表明,对外籍医生资质的选择性折扣。数据显示,医学教育地点和出生国籍在对外籍医生的偏见中存在相互作用。在应用层面上,这些数据证明了在第一世界获得的医学教育的好处不仅限于其直接结果(高质量的培训和机构认可),还包括基于国籍的患者偏见的间接减少。