University of Washington, Seattle, USA.
Bastyr University, Kenmore, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2020 Mar 24;20(1):88. doi: 10.1186/s12909-020-02004-9.
Racial bias in medical care is a significant public health issue, with increased focus on microaggressions and the quality of patient-provider interactions. Innovations in training interventions are needed to decrease microaggressions and improve provider communication and rapport with patients of color during medical encounters.
This paper presents a pilot randomized trial of an innovative clinical workshop that employed a theoretical model from social and contextual behavioral sciences. The intervention specifically aimed to decrease providers' likelihood of expressing biases and negative stereotypes when interacting with patients of color in racially charged moments, such as when patients discuss past incidents of discrimination. Workshop exercises were informed by research on the importance of mindfulness and interracial contact involving reciprocal exchanges of vulnerability and responsiveness. Twenty-five medical student and recent graduate participants were randomized to a workshop intervention or no intervention. Outcomes were measured via provider self-report and observed changes in targeted provider behaviors. Specifically, two independent, blind teams of coders assessed provider emotional rapport and responsiveness during simulated interracial patient encounters with standardized Black patients who presented specific racial challenges to participants.
Greater improvements in observed emotional rapport and responsiveness (indexing fewer microaggressions), improved self-reported explicit attitudes toward minoritized groups, and improved self-reported working alliance and closeness with the Black standardized patients were observed and reported by intervention participants.
Medical providers may be more likely to exhibit bias with patients of color in specific racially charged moments during medical encounters. This small-sample pilot study suggests that interventions that directly intervene to help providers improve responding in these moments by incorporating mindfulness and interracial contact may be beneficial in reducing racial health disparities.
医疗保健中的种族偏见是一个重大的公共卫生问题,人们越来越关注微侵犯和医患互动的质量。需要创新培训干预措施,以减少微侵犯,改善医患互动,并在医疗接触中与有色人种患者建立良好的沟通和融洽关系。
本文介绍了一项创新临床工作坊的试点随机试验,该工作坊采用了社会和情境行为科学的理论模型。该干预措施特别旨在降低医疗服务提供者在与有色人种患者互动时表达偏见和负面刻板印象的可能性,例如当患者讨论过去遭受歧视的经历时。工作坊的练习是基于研究的重要性,即正念和涉及相互交流脆弱性和响应性的跨种族接触。25 名医学生和应届毕业生被随机分配到工作坊干预组或无干预组。通过提供者自我报告和观察到的针对目标提供者行为的变化来衡量结果。具体来说,两个独立的、盲目的编码员团队评估了提供者在模拟的跨种族医患互动中与呈现特定种族挑战给参与者的标准化黑人患者的情感融洽和响应能力。
干预组的观察到的情感融洽和响应能力(表示微侵犯减少)、对少数民族群体的明确态度的自我报告、自我报告的工作联盟和与黑人标准化患者的亲密程度都有更大的改善。
在医疗接触中特定的种族紧张时刻,医疗服务提供者更有可能对有色人种患者表现出偏见。这项小型试点研究表明,直接干预以帮助提供者通过融入正念和跨种族接触来改善这些时刻的反应的干预措施可能有助于减少种族健康差距。