Department of Psychology, School of Mind, Brain & Behavior, College of Science, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Med Educ. 2011 Aug;45(8):768-76. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2011.04026.x.
Non-conscious stereotyping and prejudice contribute to racial and ethnic disparities in health care. Contemporary training in cultural competence is insufficient to reduce these problems because even educated, culturally sensitive, egalitarian individuals can activate and use their biases without being aware they are doing so. However, these problems can be reduced by workshops and learning modules that focus on the psychology of non-conscious bias. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF NON-CONSCIOUS BIAS: Research in social psychology shows that over time stereotypes and prejudices become invisible to those who rely on them. Automatic categorisation of an individual as a member of a social group can unconsciously trigger the thoughts (stereotypes) and feelings (prejudices) associated with that group, even if these reactions are explicitly denied and rejected. This implies that, when activated, implicit negative attitudes and stereotypes shape how medical professionals evaluate and interact with minority group patients. This creates differential diagnosis and treatment, makes minority group patients uncomfortable and discourages them from seeking or complying with treatment.
Cultural competence training involves teaching students to use race and ethnicity to diagnose and treat minority group patients, but to avoid stereotyping them by over-generalising cultural knowledge to individuals. However, the Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services (CLAS) standards do not specify how these goals should be accomplished and psychological research shows that common approaches like stereotype suppression are ineffective for reducing non-conscious bias. To effectively address bias in health care, training in cultural competence should incorporate research on the psychology of non-conscious stereotyping and prejudice.
Workshops or other learning modules that help medical professionals learn about non-conscious processes can provide them with skills that reduce bias when they interact with minority group patients. Examples of such skills in action include automatically activating egalitarian goals, looking for common identities and counter-stereotypical information, and taking the perspective of the minority group patient.
无意识的刻板印象和偏见导致了医疗保健中的种族和族裔差异。当代文化能力培训不足以解决这些问题,因为即使是受过教育、对文化敏感、平等主义的个人也可以在没有意识到自己在这样做的情况下激活和使用他们的偏见。然而,通过专注于无意识偏见心理学的研讨会和学习模块,可以减少这些问题。无意识偏见心理学:社会心理学研究表明,随着时间的推移,那些依赖刻板印象和偏见的人会对其变得视而不见。将个体自动归类为某个社会群体的成员,可能会无意识地触发与该群体相关的思想(刻板印象)和感受(偏见),即使这些反应被明确否认和拒绝。这意味着,当这些偏见被激活时,隐含的负面态度和刻板印象会影响医疗专业人员对少数群体患者的评估和互动方式。这会导致不同的诊断和治疗,使少数群体患者感到不适,并阻碍他们寻求或遵守治疗。文化能力培训的陷阱:文化能力培训涉及教导学生使用种族和族裔来诊断和治疗少数群体患者,但要避免通过将文化知识过度概括为个体来对他们进行刻板印象。然而,文化和语言适宜服务(CLAS)标准并没有具体说明如何实现这些目标,心理学研究表明,常见的方法,如刻板印象抑制,对于减少无意识偏见是无效的。为了有效地解决医疗保健中的偏见,文化能力培训应纳入无意识刻板印象和偏见心理学的研究。无意识偏见培训增强文化能力:帮助医疗专业人员了解无意识过程的研讨会或其他学习模块可以为他们提供与少数群体患者互动时减少偏见的技能。此类技能付诸实践的例子包括自动激活平等主义目标、寻找共同身份和反刻板印象信息,以及从少数群体患者的角度看问题。