Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence at UW Medicine, Seattle.
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle.
JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Jul 3;6(7):e2321746. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.21746.
Black patients with serious illness experience higher-intensity care at the end of life. Little research has used critical, race-conscious approaches to examine factors associated with these outcomes.
To investigate the lived experiences of Black patients with serious illness and how various factors may be associated with patient-clinician communication and medical decision-making.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: In this qualitative study, one-on-one, semistructured interviews were conducted with 25 Black patients with serious illness hospitalized at an urban academic medical center in Washington State between January 2021 and February 2023. Patients were asked to discuss experiences with racism, how those experiences affected the way they communicated with clinicians, and how racism impacted medical decision-making. Public Health Critical Race Praxis was used as framework and process.
The experience and of racism and its association, as described by Black patients who had serious illness, with patient-clinician communication and medical decision-making within a racialized health care setting.
A total of 25 Black patients (mean [SD] age, 62.0 [10.3] years; 20 males [80.0%]) with serious illness were interviewed. Participants had substantial socioeconomic disadvantage, with low levels of wealth (10 patients with 0 assets [40.0%]), income (annual income <$25 000 among 19 of 24 patients with income data [79.2%]), educational attainment (mean [SD] 13.4 [2.7] years of schooling), and health literacy (mean [SD] score in the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine-Short Form, 5.8 [2.0]). Participants reported high levels of medical mistrust and high frequency of discrimination and microaggressions experienced in health care settings. Participants reported epistemic injustice as the most common manifestation of racism: silencing of their own knowledge and lived experiences about their bodies and illness by health care workers. Participants reported that these experiences made them feel isolated and devalued, especially if they had intersecting, marginalized identities, such as being underinsured or unhoused. These experiences were associated with exacerbation of existing medical mistrust and poor patient-clinician communication. Participants described various mechanisms of self-advocacy and medical decision-making based on prior experiences with mistreatment from health care workers and medical trauma.
This study found that Black patients' experiences with racism, specifically epistemic injustice, were associated with their perspectives on medical care and decision-making during serious illness and end of life. These findings suggest that race-conscious, intersectional approaches may be needed to improve patient-clinician communication and support Black patients with serious illness to alleviate the distress and trauma of racism as these patients near the end of life.
患有重病的黑人患者在生命末期接受更高强度的护理。很少有研究使用批判性、种族意识的方法来研究与这些结果相关的因素。
调查患有严重疾病的黑人患者的生活经历,以及各种因素如何与患者-临床医生沟通和医疗决策相关。
设计、地点和参与者:在这项定性研究中,2021 年 1 月至 2023 年 2 月期间,在华盛顿州一家城市学术医疗中心住院的 25 名患有严重疾病的黑人患者进行了一对一的半结构化访谈。患者被要求讨论他们经历过的种族主义,这些经历如何影响他们与临床医生的沟通方式,以及种族主义如何影响医疗决策。公共卫生关键种族实践被用作框架和过程。
患有严重疾病的黑人患者所经历的种族主义及其影响,以及他们在种族化的医疗环境中与患者-临床医生沟通和医疗决策的关联。
共采访了 25 名患有严重疾病的黑人患者(平均年龄[标准差],62.0[10.3]岁;20 名男性[80.0%])。参与者存在大量的社会经济劣势,财富水平低(10 名患者无任何资产[40.0%]),收入低(24 名有收入数据的患者中,19 名患者的年收入低于 25000 美元[79.2%]),教育程度低(平均[标准差]13.4[2.7]年受教育年限)和健康素养低(快速估计成人医学素养-简短形式中的平均[标准差]得分,5.8[2.0])。参与者报告了高度的医疗不信任和在医疗保健环境中经历的歧视和微侵犯的高频率。参与者报告说,在医疗保健工作者那里,他们自己对身体和疾病的知识和生活经历被忽视,这是种族主义最常见的表现形式。参与者报告说,这些经历使他们感到孤立和被贬低,特别是如果他们有交叉的边缘身份,如保险不足或无家可归。这些经历与现有医疗不信任和患者-临床医生沟通不良的恶化有关。参与者描述了基于之前在医疗保健工作者虐待和医疗创伤方面的经验的各种自我倡导和医疗决策机制。
本研究发现,黑人患者的种族主义经历,特别是认识论上的不公正,与他们在重病和生命末期对医疗保健的看法和决策有关。这些发现表明,可能需要采用具有种族意识的交叉方法来改善患者-临床医生的沟通,并支持患有重病的黑人患者,以减轻他们在接近生命尽头时因种族主义而产生的痛苦和创伤。