Massie Jonathan P, Cho Daniel Y, Kneib Cameron J, Burns Jacob R, Crowe Christopher S, Lane Megan, Shakir Afaaf, Sobol Danielle L, Sabin Janice, Sousa Janelle D, Rodriguez Eduardo D, Satterwhite Thomas, Morrison Shane D
Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois.
Division of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Washington School of Medicine. Seattle, Washington.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2019 Dec 26;7(12):e2563. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000002563. eCollection 2019 Dec.
Racial disparities exist in the accessibility, delivery, and quality of healthcare. Clinical images are central to plastic surgery, but choice of images in the literature is susceptible to implicit biases. The objective of this study was to determine if published images reflect the racial demographic of patients.
A search for color photographs and rendered graphics depicting human skin was completed in 6 plastic surgery journals and the New England Journal of Medicine for each decade between 1992 and 2017. For each article, images were categorized as white or nonwhite based on Fitzpatrick Scale (1-3 versus 4-6). Additionally, the authors' geographic region was documented. Proportional data and average number of nonwhite images per article were compared. Regression analyses were performed to assess the correlation of time and geographic region on nonwhite images.
In total, 24,209 color photographs and 1,671 color graphics were analyzed. In plastic surgery journals, 22% of photographs were nonwhite and the average number of photographs per article with white skin was 5.4 compared with 1.6 with nonwhite skin ( < 0.0001). There was a significant increase in nonwhite photographs over time ( = 0.086, < 0.001) and association of nonwhite photographs with international authors ( = 0.12, < 0.001).
Roughly 60%-70% of the world population and 30% of US cosmetic patients are nonwhite. Images in plastic surgery literature reflect neither racial demographics by global region nor the patient population seeking surgery. To advance equitable care, images should better represent the racial composition of the populations served.
医疗保健的可及性、提供情况和质量存在种族差异。临床图像是整形手术的核心,但文献中图像的选择容易受到隐性偏见的影响。本研究的目的是确定发表的图像是否反映了患者的种族人口统计学特征。
在1992年至2017年的每十年间,对6种整形外科学术期刊和《新英格兰医学杂志》中描绘人类皮肤的彩色照片和渲染图形进行检索。对于每篇文章,根据菲茨帕特里克皮肤分型量表(1 - 3型与4 - 6型)将图像分类为白人或非白人。此外,记录作者的地理区域。比较比例数据和每篇文章中非白人图像的平均数量。进行回归分析以评估时间和地理区域与非白人图像的相关性。
总共分析了24,209张彩色照片和1,671张彩色图形。在整形外科学术期刊中,22%的照片是非白人的,每篇文章中白人皮肤照片的平均数量为5.4张,而非白人皮肤照片的平均数量为1.6张(<0.0001)。随着时间的推移,非白人照片数量显著增加(=0.086,<0.001),并且非白人照片与国际作者有关联(=0.12,<0.001)。
世界上大约60% - 70%的人口和30%的美国美容患者是非白人。整形手术文献中的图像既没有反映全球不同地区的种族人口统计学特征,也没有反映寻求手术的患者群体特征。为了推进公平医疗,图像应更好地反映所服务人群的种族构成。