van Ryn Michelle, Hardeman Rachel, Phelan Sean M, Burgess Diana J, Dovidio John F, Herrin Jeph, Burke Sara E, Nelson David B, Perry Sylvia, Yeazel Mark, Przedworski Julia M
Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN, USA.
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2015 Dec;30(12):1748-56. doi: 10.1007/s11606-015-3447-7. Epub 2015 Jul 1.
Physician implicit (unconscious, automatic) bias has been shown to contribute to racial disparities in medical care. The impact of medical education on implicit racial bias is unknown.
To examine the association between change in student implicit racial bias towards African Americans and student reports on their experiences with 1) formal curricula related to disparities in health and health care, cultural competence, and/or minority health; 2) informal curricula including racial climate and role model behavior; and 3) the amount and favorability of interracial contact during school.
Prospective observational study involving Web-based questionnaires administered during first (2010) and last (2014) semesters of medical school.
A total of 3547 students from a stratified random sample of 49 U.S. medical schools.
MAIN OUTCOME(S) AND MEASURE(S): Change in implicit racial attitudes as assessed by the Black-White Implicit Association Test administered during the first semester and again during the last semester of medical school.
In multivariable modeling, having completed the Black-White Implicit Association Test during medical school remained a statistically significant predictor of decreased implicit racial bias (-5.34, p ≤ 0.001: mixed effects regression with random intercept across schools). Students' self-assessed skills regarding providing care to African American patients had a borderline association with decreased implicit racial bias (-2.18, p = 0.056). Having heard negative comments from attending physicians or residents about African American patients (3.17, p = 0.026) and having had unfavorable vs. very favorable contact with African American physicians (18.79, p = 0.003) were statistically significant predictors of increased implicit racial bias.
Medical school experiences in all three domains were independently associated with change in student implicit racial attitudes. These findings are notable given that even small differences in implicit racial attitudes have been shown to affect behavior and that implicit attitudes are developed over a long period of repeated exposure and are difficult to change.
医师的隐性(无意识、自动)偏见已被证明会导致医疗保健中的种族差异。医学教育对隐性种族偏见的影响尚不清楚。
研究学生对非裔美国人隐性种族偏见的变化与学生对以下方面经历的报告之间的关联:1)与健康和医疗保健差异、文化能力和/或少数族裔健康相关的正式课程;2)包括种族氛围和榜样行为在内的非正式课程;3)在校期间跨种族接触的数量和好感度。
前瞻性观察性研究,涉及在医学院第一学期(2010年)和最后一学期(2014年)进行的基于网络的问卷调查。
来自美国49所医学院分层随机样本的3547名学生。
通过在医学院第一学期和最后一学期进行的黑白内隐联想测验评估的隐性种族态度变化。
在多变量建模中,在医学院期间完成黑白内隐联想测验仍然是隐性种族偏见降低的统计学显著预测因素(-5.34,p≤0.001:跨学校随机截距的混合效应回归)。学生对为非裔美国患者提供护理的自我评估技能与隐性种族偏见降低存在临界关联(-2.18,p = 0.056)。听到主治医生或住院医生对非裔美国患者的负面评价(3.17,p = 0.026)以及与非裔美国医生有不利而非非常有利的接触(18.79,p = 0.003)是隐性种族偏见增加的统计学显著预测因素。
所有三个领域的医学院经历都与学生隐性种族态度的变化独立相关。鉴于即使是隐性种族态度的微小差异也已被证明会影响行为,并且隐性态度是在长期反复接触中形成的且难以改变,这些发现值得关注。