Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Suite 130, Toronto, Ontario, M5T 1P8, Canada.
MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions, 30 Bond Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5B 1W8, Canada.
Int J Equity Health. 2021 Mar 10;20(1):74. doi: 10.1186/s12939-021-01410-9.
In Canada, there is longstanding evidence of health inequities for racialized groups. The purpose of this study is to understand the effect of current health care policies and practices on racial/ethnic groups and in particular racialized groups at the level of the individual in Toronto's health care system.
This study used a semi-qualitative study design: concept mapping. A purposive sampling strategy was used to recruit participants. Health care users and health care providers from Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area participated in all four concept mapping activities. The sample sizes varied according to the activity. For the rating activity, 41 racialized health care users, 23 non-racialized health care users and 11 health care providers completed this activity. The data analysis was completed using the concept systems software.
Participants generated 35 unique statements of ways in which patients feel disrespect or mistreatment when receiving health care. These statements were grouped into five clusters: 'Racial/ethnic and class discrimination', 'Dehumanizing the patient', 'Negligent communication', 'Professional misconduct', and 'Unequal access to health and health services'. Two distinct conceptual regions were identified: 'Viewed as inferior' and 'Unequal medical access'. From the rating activity, racialized health care users reported 'race'/ethnic based discrimination or everyday racism as largely contributing to the challenges experienced when receiving health care; statements rated high for action/change include 'when the health care provider does not complete a proper assessment', 'when the patient's symptoms are ignored or not taken seriously', 'and 'when the health care provider belittles or talks down to the patient'.
Our study identifies how racialized health care users experience everyday racism when receiving health care and this is important to consider in the development of future research and interventions aimed at addressing institutional racism in the health care setting. To support the elimination of institutional racism, anti-racist policies are needed to move beyond cultural competence polices and towards addressing the centrality of unequal power social relations and everyday racism in the health care system.
在加拿大,长期以来存在种族化群体健康不平等的证据。本研究的目的是了解当前医疗保健政策和实践对种族/族裔群体的影响,特别是在多伦多医疗保健系统中对个人层面的种族化群体的影响。
本研究采用半定性研究设计:概念映射。采用目的性抽样策略招募参与者。来自多伦多和大多伦多地区的医疗保健使用者和提供者参加了所有四项概念映射活动。根据活动的不同,样本量也有所不同。在评分活动中,41 名种族化医疗保健使用者、23 名非种族化医疗保健使用者和 11 名医疗保健提供者完成了此项活动。使用概念系统软件完成数据分析。
参与者提出了 35 种患者在接受医疗保健时感到不被尊重或虐待的独特方式。这些陈述被分为五个集群:“种族/族裔和阶级歧视”、“使患者失去人性”、“沟通疏忽”、“专业不当行为”和“获得医疗保健和医疗服务的机会不平等”。确定了两个不同的概念区域:“被视为低等”和“获得医疗保健的机会不平等”。从评分活动中,种族化医疗保健使用者报告称,基于“种族/族裔”的歧视或日常种族主义在很大程度上导致了他们在接受医疗保健时遇到的挑战;被评为高行动/改变的陈述包括“当医疗保健提供者未进行适当评估时”、“当患者的症状被忽视或不被认真对待时”以及“当医疗保健提供者轻视或贬低患者时”。
我们的研究确定了种族化医疗保健使用者在接受医疗保健时如何体验日常种族主义,这对于制定未来旨在解决医疗保健环境中机构种族主义的研究和干预措施非常重要。为了支持消除机构种族主义,反种族主义政策需要超越文化能力政策,转而解决医疗保健系统中不平等权力社会关系和日常种族主义的核心地位。