Department of Family and Community Medicine; MSC09-5060, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
Morehouse School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2018 Dec;33(12):2056-2064. doi: 10.1007/s11606-018-4543-2. Epub 2018 Jul 11.
Accumulating evidence suggests that clinician racial/gender decision-making biases in some instances contribute to health disparities. Previous work has produced evidence of such biases in medical students.
To identify contextual attributes in medical schools associated on average with low levels of racial/gender clinical decision-making biases.
A mixed-method design using comparison case studies of 15 medical schools selected based on results of a previous survey of student decision-making bias: 7 schools whose students collectively had, and 8 schools whose students had not shown evidence of such biases.
Purposively sampled faculty, staff, underrepresented minority medical students, and clinical-level medical students at each school.
Quantitative descriptive data and qualitative interview and focus group data assessing 32 school attributes theorized in the literature to be associated with formation of decision-making and biases. We used a mixed-method analytic design with standard qualitative analysis and fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis.
Across the 15 schools, a total of 104 faculty, administrators and staff and 21 students participated in individual interviews, and 196 students participated in 29 focus groups. While no single attribute or group of attributes distinguished the two clusters of schools, analysis showed some contextual attributes were seen more commonly in schools whose students had not demonstrated biases: longitudinal reflective small group sessions; non-accusatory approach to training in diversity; longitudinal, integrated diversity curriculum; admissions priorities and action steps toward a diverse student body; and school service orientation to the community.
We identified several potentially modifiable elements of the training environment that are more common in schools whose students do not show evidence of racial and gender biases.
越来越多的证据表明,临床医生在某些情况下存在种族/性别决策偏见,这在一定程度上导致了健康差异。先前的研究已经证明医学生中存在这种偏见。
确定医学学校中与平均种族/性别临床决策偏见程度较低相关的背景属性。
采用混合方法设计,对根据先前对学生决策偏见调查结果选择的 15 所医学院校进行比较案例研究:7 所学生普遍存在这种偏见的学校,以及 8 所学生没有表现出这种偏见的学校。
每所学校的有针对性抽取的教师、员工、代表性不足的少数族裔医学生和临床级医学生。
理论上与决策和偏见形成相关的 32 种学校属性的定量描述性数据和定性访谈及焦点小组数据。我们使用混合方法分析设计,结合标准定性分析和模糊集定性比较分析。
在这 15 所学校中,共有 104 名教师、管理人员和员工以及 21 名学生参加了个人访谈,196 名学生参加了 29 个焦点小组。虽然没有一个属性或属性组能够区分这两个聚类的学校,但分析表明,一些背景属性在没有表现出偏见的学校中更为常见:纵向反思性小组会议;多样性培训中不指责的方法;纵向、综合多样性课程;招生重点和实现多元化学生群体的行动步骤;以及学校对社区的服务导向。
我们确定了培训环境中几个潜在可改变的元素,这些元素在学生没有表现出种族和性别偏见的学校中更为常见。