Centre for Teaching & Research in Disaster Medicine and Traumatology (KMC), Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Johannes Magnus väg 11, 583 30, Linköping, Sweden.
Division of Clinical Chemistry and Pharmacology, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.
BMC Med Educ. 2022 Jun 27;22(1):503. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03558-6.
Discrimination due to gender and ethnicity has been found to be widespread in medicine and healthcare. Swedish and European legislation list seven discrimination grounds (age, sex, ethnicity, religion, sexuality, non-binary gender identity, and disability) which may intersect with each other; yet these have only been sparsely researched. The aim of this study was to assess the extent of discrimination, based on these seven discrimination grounds, amongst final-year medical students in Sweden.
A web-based survey, based on the CHERRIES-checklist, was disseminated to course coordinators and program directors in charge of final year medical students at all seven medical schools in Sweden. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, Fisher's exact test, and logistic regression. Free-text answers were analyzed thematically using the "Master Suppression techniques" conceptual framework.
Of the 1298 medical students contacted, 247 (19%) took part in the survey. Almost half (n = 103, 42%) had experienced some form of discrimination, and this difference was statistically significant by gender (p = 0.012), self-perceived ethnicity (p < 0.001), country of birth other than Scandinavia (p < 0.001) and visible religious signs (p = 0.037). The most common type of discrimination was gender-based (in 83% of students who had experienced discrimination), followed by age (48%), and ethnicity (42%). In the logistic regression, women/non-binary gender (p = 0.001, OR 2.44 [95% CI 1.41-4.22]), country of birth not in Scandinavia (p < 0.001, OR 8.05 [2.69-24.03]), non-Caucasian ethnicity (p = 0.04, OR 2.70 [1.39-5.27]), and disability (p = 0.02, OR 13.8 [1.58-12040]) were independently associated with discrimination. Half of those who had experienced religion-based discrimination and nearly one-third of victims of ethnicity-based discrimination reported "large" or "extreme" impact of this. Clinical staff or supervisors were the most common offenders (34%), closely followed by patients and their relatives (30%), with non-Caucasian respondents significantly more likely to experience discrimination by patients (p < 0.001).
Discrimination appears to be frequent in medical school, even in one of the world's "most equal countries". Discrimination is most commonly gender- or ethnicity-based, with ethnicity- and religion-based discrimination appearing to have the largest impact. Future research should continue to evaluate discrimination from an intersectional perspective, adapted for local contexts and legislations.
在医学和医疗保健领域,已经发现性别和种族歧视普遍存在。瑞典和欧洲立法列出了七种可能相互交叉的歧视理由(年龄、性别、种族、宗教、性取向、非二元性别认同和残疾);然而,这些理由只是被零星地研究过。本研究的目的是评估瑞典医学专业最后一年的医学生在这七种歧视理由上所经历的歧视程度。
一项基于 CHERRIES 清单的网络调查被分发给瑞典所有七所医学院负责最后一年医学生的课程协调员和项目主任。使用描述性统计、Fisher 精确检验和逻辑回归分析对定量数据进行分析。使用“主抑制技术”概念框架对自由文本答案进行主题分析。
在联系的 1298 名医学生中,有 247 名(19%)参与了调查。近一半(n=103,42%)经历过某种形式的歧视,这种差异在性别(p=0.012)、自我感知的种族(p<0.001)、出生国非斯堪的纳维亚(p<0.001)和明显的宗教标志(p=0.037)方面具有统计学意义。最常见的歧视类型是基于性别的(在经历过歧视的学生中占 83%),其次是年龄(48%)和种族(42%)。在逻辑回归中,女性/非二元性别(p=0.001,OR 2.44 [95%CI 1.41-4.22])、出生国不在斯堪的纳维亚(p<0.001,OR 8.05 [2.69-24.03])、非白种人种族(p=0.04,OR 2.70 [1.39-5.27])和残疾(p=0.02,OR 13.8 [1.58-12040])与歧视独立相关。经历过宗教歧视的人中有一半,经历过种族歧视的人中近三分之一报告说这种歧视的影响“很大”或“极大”。临床工作人员或主管是最常见的肇事者(34%),紧随其后的是患者及其亲属(30%),非白种人报告说更容易受到患者的歧视(p<0.001)。
在医学院,歧视似乎很常见,即使在世界上“最平等的国家”之一也是如此。歧视最常见的是基于性别或种族的,基于种族和宗教的歧视似乎影响最大。未来的研究应继续从交叉的角度评估歧视,适应当地的背景和法规。